
Text -- 1 Corinthians 5:5 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson: 1Co 5:5 - -- To deliver such an one unto Satan ( paradounai ton toiouton tōi Satanāi ).
We have the same idiom in 1Ti 1:20 used of Hymenius and Alexander. In ...
To deliver such an one unto Satan (
We have the same idiom in 1Ti 1:20 used of Hymenius and Alexander. In 2Co 12:7 Paul speaks of his own physical suffering as a messenger (

Robertson: 1Co 5:5 - -- For the destruction of the flesh ( eis olethron tēs sarkos ).
Both for physical suffering as in the case of Job (Job 2:6) and for conquest of the f...
For the destruction of the flesh (
Both for physical suffering as in the case of Job (Job 2:6) and for conquest of the fleshly sins, remedial punishment.

Robertson: 1Co 5:5 - -- That the spirit may be saved ( hina to pneuma sōthēi ).
The ultimate purpose of the expulsion as discipline. Note the use of to pneuma in contr...
That the spirit may be saved (
The ultimate purpose of the expulsion as discipline. Note the use of
Vincent -> 1Co 5:5
Vincent: 1Co 5:5 - -- To deliver - unto Satan for the destruction of the flesh. On this very obscure and much controverted passage it may be observed: 1. That it implies e...
To deliver - unto Satan for the destruction of the flesh. On this very obscure and much controverted passage it may be observed: 1. That it implies excommunication from the Church. 2. That it implies something more, the nature of which is not clearly known. 3. That casting the offender out of the Church involved casting him back into the heathen world, which Paul habitually conceives as under the power of Satan. 4. That Paul has in view the reformation of the offender: " that the spirit may be saved," etc. This reformation is to be through affliction, disease, pain, or loss, which also he is wont to conceive as Satan's work. See 1Th 2:18; 2Co 12:7. Compare Luk 13:16. Hence in delivering him over to these he uses the phrase deliver unto Satan . Compare 1Ti 1:20.
Wesley: 1Co 5:5 - -- This was the highest degree of punishment in the Christian church; and we may observe, the passing this sentence was the act of the apostle, not of th...
This was the highest degree of punishment in the Christian church; and we may observe, the passing this sentence was the act of the apostle, not of the Corinthians.

Wesley: 1Co 5:5 - -- Who was usually permitted, in such cases, to inflict pain or sickness on the offender.
Who was usually permitted, in such cases, to inflict pain or sickness on the offender.
JFB: 1Co 5:5 - -- Besides excommunication (of which the Corinthians themselves had the power), Paul delegates here to the Corinthian Church his own special power as an ...
Besides excommunication (of which the Corinthians themselves had the power), Paul delegates here to the Corinthian Church his own special power as an apostle, of inflicting corporeal disease or death in punishment for sin ("to deliver to Satan such an one," that is, so heinous a sinner). For instances of this power, see Act 5:1-11; Act 13:11; 1Ti 1:20. As Satan receives power at times to try the godly, as Job (Job 2:4-7) and Paul (2Co 12:7; compare also as to Peter, Luk 22:31), much more the ungodly. Satan, the "accuser of the brethren" (Rev 12:10) and the "adversary" (1Pe 5:8), demands the sinner for punishment on account of sin (Zec 3:1). When God lets Satan have his way, He is said to "deliver the sinner unto Satan" (compare Psa 109:6). Here it is not finally; but for the affliction of the body with disease, and even death (1Co 11:30, 1Co 11:32), so as to destroy fleshly lust. He does not say, "for the destruction of the body," for it shall share in redemption (Rom 8:23); but of the corrupt "flesh" which "cannot inherit the kingdom of God," and the lusts of which had prompted this offender to incest (Rom 7:5; Rom 8:9-10). The "destruction of the flesh" answers to "mortify the deeds of the body" (Rom 8:13), only that the latter is done by one's self, the former is effected by chastisement from God (compare 1Pe 4:6):

JFB: 1Co 5:5 - -- The spiritual part of man, in the believer the organ of the Holy Spirit. Temporary affliction often leads to permanent salvation (Psa 83:16).
The spiritual part of man, in the believer the organ of the Holy Spirit. Temporary affliction often leads to permanent salvation (Psa 83:16).
Clarke -> 1Co 5:5
Clarke: 1Co 5:5 - -- To deliver such a one unto Satan - There is no evidence that delivering to Satan was any form of excommunication known either among the Jews or the ...
To deliver such a one unto Satan - There is no evidence that delivering to Satan was any form of excommunication known either among the Jews or the Christians. Lightfoot, Selden, and Schoettgen, who have searched all the Jewish records, have found nothing that answers to this: it was a species of punishment administered in extraordinary cases, in which the body and the mind of an incorrigible transgressor were delivered by the authority of God into the power of Satan, to be tortured with diseases and terrors as a warning to all; but while the body and mind were thus tormented, the immortal spirit was under the influence of the Divine mercy; and the affliction, in all probability, was in general only for a season; though sometimes it was evidently unto death, as the destruction of the flesh seems to imply. But the soul found mercy at the hand of God; for such a most extraordinary interference of God’ s power and justice, and of Satan’ s influence, could not fail to bring the person to a state of the deepest humiliation and contrition; and thus, while the flesh was destroyed, the spirit was saved in the day of the Lord Jesus. No such power as this remains in the Church of God; none such should be assumed; the pretensions to it are as wicked as they are vain. It was the same power by which Ananias and Sapphira were struck dead, and Elymas the sorcerer struck blind. Apostles alone were intrusted with it.
Calvin -> 1Co 5:5
Calvin: 1Co 5:5 - -- 5.To deliver to Satan for the destruction of the flesh As the Apostles had been furnished with this power among others, that they could deliver over...
5.To deliver to Satan for the destruction of the flesh As the Apostles had been furnished with this power among others, that they could deliver over to Satan wicked and obstinate persons, and made use of him as a scourge to correct them, Chrysostom, and those that follow him, view these words of Paul as referring to a chastisement of that kind, agreeably to the exposition that is usually given of another passage, in reference to Alexander and Hymeneus, (Tit 1:20.) To deliver over to Satan, they think, means nothing but the infliction of a severe punishment upon the body. But when I examine the whole context more narrowly, and at the same time compare it with what is stated in 2Co 2:5, I give up that interpretation, as forced and at variance with Paul’s meaning, and understand it simply of excommunication. For delivering over to Satan is an appropriate expression for denoting excommunication; for as Christ reigns in the Church, so Satan reigns out of the Church, as Augustine, too, has remarked, 280 in his sixty-eighth sermon on the words of the Apostle, where he explains this passage. 281 As, then, we are received into the communion of the Church, and remain in it on this condition, that we are under the protection and guardianship of Christ, I say, that he who is cast out of the Church is in a manner delivered over to the power of Satan, for he becomes an alien, and is cast out of Christ’s kingdom.
The clause that follows, for the destruction of the flesh, is made use of for the purpose of softening; for Paul’s meaning is not that the person who is chastised is given over to Satan to be utterly ruined, or so as to be given up to the devil in perpetual bondage, but that it is a temporary condemnation, and not only so, but of such a nature as will be salutary. For as the salvation equally with the condemnation of the spirit is eternal, he takes the condemnation of the flesh as meaning temporal condemnation. “We will condemn him in this world for a time, that the Lord may preserve him in his kingdom.” This furnishes an answer to the objection, by which some endeavor to set aside this exposition, for as the sentence of excommunication is directed rather against the soul than against the outward man, they inquire how it can be called the destruction of the flesh My answer, then, is, (as I have already in part stated,) that the destruction of the flesh is opposed to the salvation of the spirit, simply because the former is temporal and the latter is eternal. In this sense the Apostle in Heb 5:7, uses the expression the days of Christ ’ s flesh, to mean the course of his mortal life. Now the Church in chastising offenders with severity, spares them not in this world, in order that God may spare them. 282 Should any one wish to have anything farther in reference to the rite of excommunication, its causes, necessity, purposes, and limitation, let him consult my Institutes. 283
Defender -> 1Co 5:5
Defender: 1Co 5:5 - -- What an awesome insight this provides into the unseen world! Ever since Adam, Satan in some sense has "the power of death" (Heb 2:14) over human being...
What an awesome insight this provides into the unseen world! Ever since Adam, Satan in some sense has "the power of death" (Heb 2:14) over human beings. This power, however, is normally restrained by God, at least in the case of those who have been redeemed, so that Satan can only hurt them or stress them to the extent that God allows for His own good purposes. The classic example is that of Job (Job 1:12; Job 2:6), but also note Luk 22:31, Luk 22:32, and 2Co 12:7, in the cases of Peter and Paul, respectively.
In the case of Ananias and Sapphira, Satan was the instigator of their sin (Act 5:3), and evidently God (speaking through Peter) removed His protection from them, allowing Satan to slay them. In the case of the incestuous sinner in the church at Corinth, God similarly spoke through Paul to deliver the man over to Satan in like fashion as His later treatment of the blasphemers Hymenaeus and Alexander (1Ti 1:20). The early church had already seen what could happen when repentance was not forthcoming. In fact, as Paul wrote in the same epistle, "many are weak and sickly among you, and many sleep" (1Co 11:30), as a result of their partaking of the Lord's supper while also partaking of flagrant unconfessed sin in their lives. Although there are no apostles in the church today to make such judgments, God can still do it Himself. Satan is still the tempter as well as the accuser (Rev 12:10), and God can still allow him to injure or even to kill His children if He so wills and if His eternal purposes are served thereby. However, no pastor, or other church leaders today should make such pronouncements."
TSK -> 1Co 5:5
TSK: 1Co 5:5 - -- deliver : 1Co 5:13; Job 2:6; Psa 109:6; 2Co 2:6, 2Co 10:6, 2Co 13:10; Act 26:18; 1Ti 1:20
that : 1Co 11:32; 2Co 2:7; Gal 6:1, Gal 6:2; 2Th 3:14, 2Th 3...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> 1Co 5:5
Barnes: 1Co 5:5 - -- To deliver - This is the sentence which is to be executed. You are to deliver him to Satan, etc. Unto Satan - Beza, and the Latin fathers...
To deliver - This is the sentence which is to be executed. You are to deliver him to Satan, etc.
Unto Satan - Beza, and the Latin fathers, suppose that this is only an expression of excommunication. They say, that in the Scriptures there are but two kingdoms recognized - the kingdom of God, or the church, and the kingdom of the world, which is regarded as under the control of Satan; and that to exclude a man from one is to subject him to the dominion of the other. There is some foundation for this opinion; and there can be no doubt that excommunication is here intended, and that, by excommunication, the offender was in some sense placed under the control of Satan. It is further evident that it is here supposed that by being thus placed under him the offender would be subject to corporal inflictions by the agency of Satan, which are here called the "destruction of the flesh."Satan is elsewhere referred to as the author of bodily diseases. Thus, in the case of Job, Job 2:7. A similar instance is mentioned in 1Ti 1:20, where Paul says he had delivered Hymeneus and Alexander to "Satan, that they might learn not to blaspheme."It may be observed here that though this was to be done by the concurrence of the church, as having a right to administer discipline, yet it was directed by apostolic authority; and there is no evidence that this was the usual form of excommunication, nor ought it now to be used. There was evidently miraculous power evinced in this case, and that power has long since ceased in the church.
For the destruction of the flesh - We may observe here:
(1) That this does not mean that the man was to die under the infliction of the censure, for the object was to recover him; and it is evident that, whatever he suffered as the consequence of this, he survived it, and Paul again instructed the Corinthians to admit him to their fellowship, 2Co 2:7.
\caps1 (2) i\caps0 t was designed to punish him for licentiousness of life - often called in the Scriptures one of the sins, or works of the flesh Gal 5:19, and the design was that the punishment should follow "in the line of the offence,"or be a just retribution - as punishment often does. Many have supposed that by the "destruction of the flesh"Paul meant only the destruction of his fleshly appetites or carnal affections; and that he supposed that this would be effected by the act of excommunication. But it is very evident from the Scriptures that the apostles were imbued with the power of inflicting diseases or bodily calamities for crimes. See Act 13:11; 1Co 11:30. What this bodily malady was we have no means of knowing. It is evident that it was not of very long duration, since when the apostle exhorts them 2Co 2:7 again to receive him, there is no mention made of his suffering then under it - This was an extraordinary and miraculous power. It was designed for the government of the church in its infancy, when everything was suited to show the direct agency of God; and it ceased, doubtless, with the apostles. The church now has no such power. It cannot now work miracles; and all its discipline now is to be moral discipline, designed not to inflict bodily pain and penalties, but to work a moral reformation in the offender.
That the spirit may be saved - That his soul might be saved; that he might be corrected, humbled, and reformed by these sufferings, and recalled to the paths of piety and virtue. This expresses the true design of the discipline of the church, and it ought never to be inflicted but with a direct intention to benefit the offender, and to save the soul. Even when he is cut off and disowned, the design should not be vengeance, or punishment merely, but it should be to recover him and save him from ruin.
In the day of the Lord Jesus - The Day of Judgment when the Lord Jesus shall come, and shall collect his people to himself.
Poole -> 1Co 5:5
Poole: 1Co 5:5 - -- What this delivering to Satan is, (of which also we read, 1Ti 1:20 ), is something doubted by interpreters. That by it is to be understood excommuni...
What this delivering to Satan is, (of which also we read, 1Ti 1:20 ), is something doubted by interpreters. That by it is to be understood excommunication, or casting out of the communion of the church, can hardly be doubted by any that considereth:
1. That the apostle speaketh of an action which might be, and ought to have been, done by the church of Corinth when they met together, and for the not doing of which the apostle blameth them.
2. That the end of the action was, taking away the scandalous person from the midst amongst them, 1Co 5:2 ; purging out the old leaven, that they might become a new lump, 1Co 5:7 .
3. It was a punishment inflicted by many. Those, therefore, who interpret the phrase of an extraordinary power given the apostles or primitive churches, miraculously to give up the scandalous person to the power of the devil, to be afflicted, tormented, or vexed by him, (though not unto death), seem not to have considered, that the apostle would not have blamed the church of Corinth for not working a miracle, and that we no where read of any such power committed to any church of Christ; and one would in reason think, that persons under such circumstances should rather be pitied and helped, than shunned and avoided.
The only question therefore is: Why the apostle expresseth excommunication under the notion of being delivered to Satan? Some have thought that the reason is, because God was so pleased to ratify the just censures of his church, delivering such persons as were cast out of it into the hands of Satan, to be vexed and tormented by him; and that this might be in some particular cases, none can deny, but that this was an ordinary dispensation of Providence as to all excommunicated persons, wants better proof than any have yet showed us. It appears to me a more probable account of this phrase which others have given us, telling us, that Satan is called the god of the world, and the prince of the world, as world is taken in opposition to the church of God; so as delivering to Satan, is no more than our Saviour’ s— If he neglect to hear the church, let hint be unto thee as an heathen man and a publican, Mat 18:17 . Only for the further terror of it, the apostle expresseth it by this phrase of delivering up to Satan; thereby letting us know, how dreadful a thing it is to be out of God’ s special protection, and shut out from the ordinary means of grace and salvation, and exposed to the temptations of our grand adversary the devil, which is the state of all those who are out of the church, either having never been members of it, or, according to the rules of Christ, cast out of the communion of it.
For the destruction of the flesh, that the spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus: the end of excommunication is not for the destruction of the person of him who is cast out, but for the destruction of his flesh, that is, his lusts, which are often in Scripture called flesh, or the maceration and affliction of his body through grief and sorrow; for a determination of his fleshly being cannot be here understood by the destruction of the flesh, for that is no effect of excommunication; and those who interpret the delivery to Satan, of an extraordinary punishment, which the apostles or church in the primitive times had a power to inflict, make it to terminate not in the death, but in the torments only, of the person so punished. Again, the apostle mentioneth this punishment as a means to the eternal salvation of this person’ s soul in the day of Christ. There is no text in Scripture which more clearly asserts and opens the ordinance and nature of excommunication, than this text doth. As to those who are to inflict it, it lets us know, that it is to be done by the church, when gathered together; though the elders of the church may put the church upon it, and decree it, yet the consent and approbation of the whole church must be to it; and indeed it is vain for the officers of a church to cast any out of a communion, when the members of that communion will yet have conununion with him or them so cast out. It also lets us know, that it is a censure by which men are not shut out of the fellowship of men as men, but of men as Christians, as a church of Christ, in such religious actions and duties as concern them, considered as such a body: excommunication doth not make it unlawful for persons to buy and sell with the persons excommunicated, but to eat and drink at the Lord’ s table with them, or have communion with them in acts proper to a church as the church of Christ. The excommunicated person is in something a better condition than a heathen, for he is not to be counted as an enemy, but admonished as a brother, 2Th 3:15 . Heathens also may hear the word; he is only to be avoided in acts of church fellowship; and as to intimate communion, though it be not religious, as appeareth from 1Co 5:11 , and from 2Th 3:14 . Further, we are taught from hence, that none ought to be excommunicated but for notorious, scandalous sins, nor without a solemn invocation on the name of Christ, inquiring his will in the case. We are further taught, that the person that is duly excommunicated is in a miserable state, he is delivered up to Satan, cast out of God’ s special protection, which is peculiar to his church, and oftentimes exposed to formidable temptations. Finally, we are from this text instructed, that excommunication ought to be so administered, as may best tend to the saving of the soul of him that falls under that censure: men’ s end in excommunications should not be the ruin of persons in their health or estates, only the humbling of them, and bringing them to a sense of their sins, and a true repentance; and all means in order to that end should be used, even to such as are cast out of any church, such are repeated admonitions, the prayers of the church for them, &c.
Gill -> 1Co 5:5
Gill: 1Co 5:5 - -- To deliver such an one unto Satan,.... This, as before observed, is to be read in connection with 1Co 5:3 and is what the apostle there determined to ...
To deliver such an one unto Satan,.... This, as before observed, is to be read in connection with 1Co 5:3 and is what the apostle there determined to do with this incestuous person; namely, to deliver him unto Satan; by which is meant, not the act of excommunication, or the removing of him from the communion of the church, which is an act of the whole church, and not of any single person; whereas this was what the church had nothing to do with; it was not what they were to do, or ought to do, but what the apostle had resolved to do; and which was an act of his own, and peculiar to him as an apostle, see 1Ti 1:20. Nor is this a form of excommunication; nor was this phrase ever used in excommunicating persons by the primitive churches; nor ought it ever to be used; it is what no man, or set of men, have power to do now, since the ceasing of the extraordinary gifts of the Spirit, which the apostles were endowed with; who, as they had a power over Satan to dispossess him from the bodies of men, so to deliver up the bodies of men into his hands, as the apostle did this man's:
for the destruction of the flesh; that is, that his body might be shook, buffeted, afflicted, and tortured in a terrible manner; that by this means he might be brought to a sense of his sin, to repentance for it, and make an humble acknowledgment of it:
that the spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus; that he might be renewed in the spirit of his mind, be restored by repentance, and his soul be saved in the day of Christ; either at death, when soul and body would be separated, or at the day of the resurrection, when both should be reunited; for the flesh here means, not the corruption of nature, in opposition to the spirit, as a principle of grace, but the body, in distinction from the soul: nor was the soul of this man, only his body, delivered for a time unto Satan; the end of which was, that his soul might be saved, which could never be done by delivering it up to Satan: and very wrongfully is this applied to excommunication; when it is no part of excommunication, nor the end of it, to deliver souls to Satan, but rather to deliver them from him. The phrase seems to be Jewish, and to express that extraordinary power the apostles had in those days, as well in giving up the bodies to Satan, for a temporal chastisement, as in delivering them from him. The Jews say, that Solomon had such a power; of whom they tell the following story e:
"one day he saw the angel of death grieving; he said to him, why grievest thou? he replied, these two Cushites have desired of me to sit here, "he delivered them to the devil"; the gloss is, these seek of me to ascend, for their time to die was come; but he could not take away their souls, because it was decreed concerning them, that they should not die but in the gate of Luz,
The phrase is much the same as here, and the power which they, without any foundation, ascribe to Solomon, the apostles had: this is their rod which they used, sometimes in striking persons dead, sometimes by inflicting diseases on them themselves; and at other times by delivering them up into the hands of Satan to be afflicted and terrified by him, which is the case here. And it may be observed, that the giving up of Job into the hands of Satan, by the Lord, is expressed in the Septuagint version by the same word as here; for where it is said, Job 2:6 "behold, he is in thine hand"; that version renders it, "behold,

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: 1Co 5:5 The shorter reading, κυρίου (kuriou, “Lord”), is found in Ì46 B 630 1739 pc; κυρί...
Geneva Bible -> 1Co 5:5
Geneva Bible: 1Co 5:5 ( 5 ) To ( c ) deliver such an one unto Satan for the ( 6 ) destruction of the flesh, that the spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus.
( 5 ...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 1Co 5:1-13
TSK Synopsis: 1Co 5:1-13 - --1 The incestuous person,6 is cause rather of shame unto them than of rejoicing.7 The old leaven is to be purged out.10 Hienous offenders are to be sha...
MHCC -> 1Co 5:1-8
MHCC: 1Co 5:1-8 - --The apostle notices a flagrant abuse, winked at by the Corinthians. Party spirit, and a false notion of Christian liberty, seem to have saved the offe...
Matthew Henry -> 1Co 5:1-6
Matthew Henry: 1Co 5:1-6 - -- Here the apostle states the case; and, I. Lets them know what was the common or general report concerning them, that one of their community was guil...
Barclay -> 1Co 5:1-8
Barclay: 1Co 5:1-8 - --Paul is dealing with what, for him, was an ever recurring problem. In sexual matters the heathen did not know the meaning of chastity. They took t...
Constable: 1Co 1:10--7:1 - --II. Conditions reported to Paul 1:10--6:20
The warm introduction to the epistle (1:1-9) led Paul to give a stron...

Constable: 1Co 5:1--6:20 - --B. Lack of discipline in the church chs. 5-6
The second characteristic in the Corinthian church reported...

Constable: 1Co 5:1-13 - --1. Incest in the church ch. 5
First, the church had manifested a very permissive attitude toward...
