
Text -- 1 Corinthians 3:1-7 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson: 1Co 3:1 - -- But as unto carnal ( all' hōs sarkinois ).
Latin carneus . "As men o’ flesh,"Braid Scots; "as worldlings,"Moffatt. This form in ̇inos like...
But as unto carnal (
Latin carneus . "As men o’ flesh,"Braid Scots; "as worldlings,"Moffatt. This form in

Robertson: 1Co 3:2 - -- I fed you with milk, not with meat ( gala humas epotisa , ou brōma ).
Note two accusatives with the verb, epotisa , first aorist active indicative...
I fed you with milk, not with meat (
Note two accusatives with the verb,

Robertson: 1Co 3:3 - -- For ye are yet carnal ( eti gar sarkikoi este ).
Sarkikos , unlike sarkinos , like ikos formations, means adapted to, fitted for the flesh (sarx )...
For ye are yet carnal (

Robertson: 1Co 3:3 - -- Jealousy and strife ( zēlos kai eris ).
Zeal (zēlos from zeō , to boil) is not necessarily evil, but good if under control. It may be not acc...
Jealousy and strife (
Zeal (

Robertson: 1Co 3:4 - -- For when one saith ( hotan gar legēi tis ).
Indefinite temporal clause with the present subjunctive of repetition (Robertson, Grammar , p. 972). E...
For when one saith (
Indefinite temporal clause with the present subjunctive of repetition (Robertson, Grammar , p. 972). Each instance is a case in point and proof abundant of the strife.

Of Paul (
Predicate genitive, belong to Paul, on Paul’ s side.

Robertson: 1Co 3:4 - -- Of Apollos ( Apollō ).
Same genitive, but the form is the so-called Attic second declension. See the nominative Apollōs in 1Co 3:5.
Of Apollos (
Same genitive, but the form is the so-called Attic second declension. See the nominative

Robertson: 1Co 3:4 - -- Men ( anthrōpoi ).
Just mere human creatures (anthrōpoi , generic term for mankind), in the flesh (sarkinoi ), acting like the flesh (sarkikoi ...
Men (
Just mere human creatures (

Robertson: 1Co 3:5 - -- What then? ( ti ouṉ ).
He does not say tis (who), but ti (what), neuter singular interrogative pronoun.
What then? (
He does not say

Robertson: 1Co 3:5 - -- Ministers ( diakonoi ).
Not leaders of parties or sects, but merely servants through whom ye believed. The etymology of the word Thayer gives as dia ...
Ministers (
Not leaders of parties or sects, but merely servants through whom ye believed. The etymology of the word Thayer gives as

Robertson: 1Co 3:5 - -- As the Lord gave to him ( hōs ho Kurios edōken ).
Hence no minister of the Lord like Apollos and Paul has any basis for pride or conceit nor shou...
As the Lord gave to him (
Hence no minister of the Lord like Apollos and Paul has any basis for pride or conceit nor should be made the occasion for faction and strife. This idea Paul enlarges upon through chapters 1 Corinthians 3; 4 and it is made plain in chapter 1 Corinthians 12.

Robertson: 1Co 3:6 - -- I planted ( egō ephuteusa ).
First aorist active indicative of old verb phuteuō . This Paul did as Luke tells us in Acts 18:1-18.
I planted (
First aorist active indicative of old verb

Robertson: 1Co 3:6 - -- Apollos watered ( Apollōs epotisen ).
Apollos irrigated the church there as is seen in Acts 18:24-19:1. Another aorist tense as in 1Co 3:2.
Apollos watered (
Apollos irrigated the church there as is seen in Acts 18:24-19:1. Another aorist tense as in 1Co 3:2.

Robertson: 1Co 3:6 - -- But God gave the increase ( alla ho theos ēuxanen ).
Imperfect tense here (active indicative) for the continuous blessing of God both on the work o...
But God gave the increase (
Imperfect tense here (active indicative) for the continuous blessing of God both on the work of Paul and Apollos, Corinthians-labourers with God in God’ s field (1Co 3:9). Reports of revivals sometimes give the glory to the evangelist or to both evangelist and pastor. Paul gives it all to God. He and Apollos cooperated as successive pastors.

Robertson: 1Co 3:7 - -- So then neither - neither - but ( Hōste outė̇outė̇all' ).
Paul applies his logic relentlessly to the facts. He had asked what (ti ) is Apo...
So then neither - neither - but (
Paul applies his logic relentlessly to the facts. He had asked what (

Robertson: 1Co 3:7 - -- Neither is anything ( ti )
the one who plants nor the one who waters. God is the whole and we are not anything.
Neither is anything (
the one who plants nor the one who waters. God is the whole and we are not anything.
Vincent: 1Co 3:1 - -- Carnal ( σαρκίνοις )
Made of flesh. See on Rom 7:14, and see on flesh , Rom 7:5.

Vincent: 1Co 3:1 - -- Babes ( νηπίοις )
From νη not , and ἔπος a word . Strictly, non-speakers . Compare the Latin infans . Strongly contraste...
Babes (
From

Vincent: 1Co 3:2 - -- I fed ( ἐπότισα )
Lit., I gave you to drink . An instance of the rhetorical figure zeugma , by which one verb is attached to...
I fed (
Lit., I gave you to drink . An instance of the rhetorical figure zeugma , by which one verb is attached to two nouns, of which it only suits the meaning of one, but suggests a verb suitable for the other. Thus " gave to drink " is applied to meat as well as to milk . For another illustration see hindering (A.V. and Rev., forbidding ), 1Ti 4:3.

Vincent: 1Co 3:3 - -- Carnal ( σαρκικοί )
Here the milder word is used (see 1Co 3:1), having the nature of flesh . In 1Co 3:1, Paul would say that h...
Carnal (
Here the milder word is used (see 1Co 3:1), having the nature of flesh . In 1Co 3:1, Paul would say that he was compelled to address the Corinthians as unspiritual, made of flesh . Here he says that though they have received the Spirit in some measure, they are yet under the influence of the flesh.

Vincent: 1Co 3:4 - -- Another ( ἕτερος )
See on Mat 6:24. Not merely another , numerically, but another of different affinities and prepossessions.
Another (
See on Mat 6:24. Not merely another , numerically, but another of different affinities and prepossessions.

Carnal
The best texts read

Vincent: 1Co 3:4 - -- But ministers
Omit but , and place the interrogations after Paul and Apollos , respectively, as Rev. For ministers see on Mat 20:26; see on...

Vincent: 1Co 3:6 - -- Planted - watered - gave the increase ( ἐφύτευσα - ἐπότισεν - ηὔξανεν )
The first two verbs are in the aor...
Planted - watered - gave the increase (
The first two verbs are in the aorist tense, marking definite acts; the third is in the imperfect, marking the continued gracious agency of God, and possibly the simultaneousness of His work with that of the two preachers. God was giving the increase while we planted and watered. There is a parallel in the simultaneous work of Satan with that of the preachers of the word as indicated by the continuous presents in Mat 13:19. See note there.

Vincent: 1Co 3:7 - -- Anything
The devoted Angelique Arnauld, of Port Royal, when her sister condoled with her on the absence of her confessor, Singlier, replied: " I ...
Anything
The devoted Angelique Arnauld, of Port Royal, when her sister condoled with her on the absence of her confessor, Singlier, replied: " I have never put a man in God's place. He can have only what God gives him; and God gives him something for us only when it is His will that we should receive it through him."
He spoke before, 1Co 2:1, of his entrance, now of his progress, among them.

Wesley: 1Co 3:1 - -- Adult, experienced Christians. But as unto men who were still in great measure carnal, as unto babes in Christ - Still weak in grace, though eminent i...
Adult, experienced Christians. But as unto men who were still in great measure carnal, as unto babes in Christ - Still weak in grace, though eminent in gifts, 1Co 1:5.

Wesley: 1Co 3:2 - -- The first and plainest truths of the gospel. So should every preacher suit his doctrine to his hearers.
The first and plainest truths of the gospel. So should every preacher suit his doctrine to his hearers.

As mere men; not as Christians, according to God.

Wesley: 1Co 3:4 - -- St. Paul named himself and Apollos, to show that he would condemn any division among them, even though it were in favour of himself, or the dearest fr...
St. Paul named himself and Apollos, to show that he would condemn any division among them, even though it were in favour of himself, or the dearest friend he had in the world.

For the Spirit of God allows no party zeal.

Wesley: 1Co 3:5 - -- Or servants. By whom ye believed, as the Lord, the Master of those servants, gave to every man.
Or servants. By whom ye believed, as the Lord, the Master of those servants, gave to every man.

Is all in all: without him neither planting nor watering avails.
JFB: 1Co 3:1 - -- That is, as the natural (animal) man cannot receive, so I also could not speak unto you the deep things of God, as I would to the spiritual; but I was...
That is, as the natural (animal) man cannot receive, so I also could not speak unto you the deep things of God, as I would to the spiritual; but I was compelled to speak to you as I would to MEN OF FLESH. The oldest manuscripts read this for "carnal." The former (literally, "fleshy") implies men wholly of flesh, or natural. Carnal, or fleshly, implies not they were wholly natural or unregenerate (1Co 2:14), but that they had much of a carnal tendency; for example their divisions. Paul had to speak to them as he would to men wholly natural, inasmuch as they are still carnal (1Co 3:3) in many respects, notwithstanding their conversion (1Co 1:4-9).

JFB: 1Co 3:1 - -- Contrasted with the perfect (fully matured) in Christ (Col 1:28; compare Heb 5:13-14). This implies they were not men wholly of flesh, though carnal i...
Contrasted with the perfect (fully matured) in Christ (Col 1:28; compare Heb 5:13-14). This implies they were not men wholly of flesh, though carnal in tendencies. They had life in Christ, but it was weak. He blames them for being still in a degree (not altogether, compare 1Co 1:5, 1Co 1:7; therefore he says as) babes in Christ, when by this time they ought to have "come unto a perfect man, unto the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ" (Eph 4:13). In Rom 7:14, also the oldest manuscripts read, "I am a man of flesh."

The elementary "principles of the doctrine of Christ."

JFB: 1Co 3:3 - -- Jealousy, rivalry. As this refers to their feelings, "strife" refers to their words, and "divisions" to their actions [BENGEL]. There is a gradation, ...
Jealousy, rivalry. As this refers to their feelings, "strife" refers to their words, and "divisions" to their actions [BENGEL]. There is a gradation, or ascending climax: envying had produced strife, and strife divisions (factious parties) [GROTIUS]. His language becomes severer now as He proceeds; in 1Co 1:11 he had only said "contentions," he now multiplies the words (compare the stronger term, 1Co 4:6, than in 1Co 3:21).

JFB: 1Co 3:3 - -- For "strife" is a "work of the flesh" (Gal 5:20). The "flesh" includes all feelings that aim not at the glory of God, and the good of our neighbor, bu...
For "strife" is a "work of the flesh" (Gal 5:20). The "flesh" includes all feelings that aim not at the glory of God, and the good of our neighbor, but at gratifying self.

JFB: 1Co 3:3 - -- As unregenerate men (compare Mat 16:23). "After the flesh, not after the Spirit" of God, as becomes you as regenerate by the Spirit (Rom 8:4; Gal 5:25...
As unregenerate men (compare Mat 16:23). "After the flesh, not after the Spirit" of God, as becomes you as regenerate by the Spirit (Rom 8:4; Gal 5:25-26).

JFB: 1Co 3:4 - -- The oldest manuscripts read, "Are ye not men?" that is, "walking as men" unregenerate (1Co 3:3).
The oldest manuscripts read, "Are ye not men?" that is, "walking as men" unregenerate (1Co 3:3).

JFB: 1Co 3:5 - -- Seeing then that ye severally strive so for your favorite teachers, "Who is (of what intrinsic power and dignity) Paul?" If so great an apostle reason...
Seeing then that ye severally strive so for your favorite teachers, "Who is (of what intrinsic power and dignity) Paul?" If so great an apostle reasons so of himself, how much more does humility, rather than self-seeking, become ordinary ministers!

JFB: 1Co 3:5 - -- The oldest manuscripts read in the reverse order, "Apollos," &c. Paul." He puts Apollos before himself in humility.
The oldest manuscripts read in the reverse order, "Apollos," &c. Paul." He puts Apollos before himself in humility.

JFB: 1Co 3:5 - -- The oldest manuscripts have no "but." "Who is Apollos . . . Paul? (mere) ministers (a lowly word appropriate here, servants), by whom (not "in whom"; ...
The oldest manuscripts have no "but." "Who is Apollos . . . Paul? (mere) ministers (a lowly word appropriate here, servants), by whom (not "in whom"; by whose ministrations) ye believed."

JFB: 1Co 3:5 - -- That is, to the several hearers, for it was GOD that "gave the increase" (1Co 3:6).
That is, to the several hearers, for it was GOD that "gave the increase" (1Co 3:6).

JFB: 1Co 3:6 - -- (Act 18:1; Act 19:1). Apollos at his own desire (Act 18:27) was sent by the brethren to Corinth, and there followed up the work which Paul had begun.

JFB: 1Co 3:6 - -- That is, the growth (1Co 3:10; Act 18:27). "Believed through grace." Though ministers are nothing, and God all in all, yet God works by instruments, a...

JFB: 1Co 3:7 - -- Namely, is all in all. "God" is emphatically last in the Greek, "He that giveth the increase (namely), GOD." Here follows a parenthesis, 1Co 3:8-21, w...
Namely, is all in all. "God" is emphatically last in the Greek, "He that giveth the increase (namely), GOD." Here follows a parenthesis, 1Co 3:8-21, where "Let no man glory in men" stands in antithetic contrast to "God" here.
Clarke: 1Co 3:1 - -- I, brethren, could not speak unto you as unto spiritual - This is a continuation of the preceding discourse. See the notes on 1Co 2:14, 1Co 2:15 (no...

Clarke: 1Co 3:1 - -- But as unto carnal - Σαρκικοις, Persons under the influence of fleshly appetites; coveting and living for the things of this life
But as unto carnal -

Clarke: 1Co 3:1 - -- Babes in Christ - Just beginning to acquire some notion of the Christian religion, hut as yet very incapable of judging what is most suitable to you...
Babes in Christ - Just beginning to acquire some notion of the Christian religion, hut as yet very incapable of judging what is most suitable to yourselves, and consequently utterly unqualified to discern between one teacher and another; so that your making the distinctions which you do make, so far from being a proof of mature judgment, is on the contrary a proof that you have no right judgment at all; and this springs from your want of knowledge in Divine things.

Clarke: 1Co 3:2 - -- I have fed you with milk - I have instructed you in the elements of Christianity - in its simplest and easiest truths; because from the low state of...
I have fed you with milk - I have instructed you in the elements of Christianity - in its simplest and easiest truths; because from the low state of your minds in religious knowledge, you were incapable of comprehending the higher truths of the Gospel: and in this state you will still continue. The apostle thus exposes to them the absurdity of their conduct in pretending to judge between preacher and preacher, while they had but a very partial acquaintance even with the first principles of Christianity.

Clarke: 1Co 3:3 - -- There is among you envying, and strife, and divisions - Ζηλος και ερις και διχοστασιαι . There are three things here wort...
There is among you envying, and strife, and divisions -

Clarke: 1Co 3:4 - -- For while one saith, I am of Paul, etc. - It was notorious that both Paul and Apollos held the same creed; between them there was not the slightest ...
For while one saith, I am of Paul, etc. - It was notorious that both Paul and Apollos held the same creed; between them there was not the slightest difference: when, therefore, the dissentients began to prefer the one to the other, it was the fullest proof of their carnality; because in the doctrines of these apostles there was no difference: so that what the people were captivated by must be something in their outward manner, Apollos being probably more eloquent than Paul. Their preferring one to another on such an account proved that they were carnal - led by their senses and mere outward appearances, without being under the guidance either of reason or grace. There are thousands of such people in the Christian Church to the present day. See the notes on 1Co 1:10, etc.

Clarke: 1Co 3:5 - -- Ministers by whom ye believed - The different apostles who have preached unto you the word of life are the means which God has used to bring you to ...
Ministers by whom ye believed - The different apostles who have preached unto you the word of life are the means which God has used to bring you to the knowledge of Christ. No one of those has either preached or recommended himself; they all preach and recommend Christ Jesus the Lord

Clarke: 1Co 3:5 - -- Even as the Lord gave to every man? - Whatever difference there may be in our talents, it is of God’ s making; and he who knows best what is be...
Even as the Lord gave to every man? - Whatever difference there may be in our talents, it is of God’ s making; and he who knows best what is best for his Church, has distributed both gifts and graces according to his own mind; and, as his judgment is infallible, all these dispensations must be right. Paul, therefore, is as necessary to the perfecting of the Church of Christ as Apollos; and Apollos, as Paul. Both, but with various gifts, point out the same Christ, building on one and the same foundation.

Clarke: 1Co 3:6 - -- I have planted - I first sowed the seed of the Gospel at Corinth, and in the region of Achaia
I have planted - I first sowed the seed of the Gospel at Corinth, and in the region of Achaia

Clarke: 1Co 3:6 - -- Apollos watered - Apollos came after me, and, by his preachings and exhortations, watered the seed which I had sowed; but God gave the increase. The...
Apollos watered - Apollos came after me, and, by his preachings and exhortations, watered the seed which I had sowed; but God gave the increase. The seed has taken root, has sprung up, and borne much fruit; but this was by the especial blessing of God. As in the natural so in the spiritual world; it is by the especial blessing of God that the grain which is sown in the ground brings forth thirty, sixty, or a hundred fold: it is neither the sower nor the waterer that produces this strange and inexplicable multiplication; it is God alone. So it is by the particular agency of the Spirit of God that even good seed, sown in good ground, the purest doctrine conveyed to the honest heart, produces the salvation of the soul.

Clarke: 1Co 3:7 - -- So then, neither is he that planteth any thing - God alone should have all the glory, as the seed is his, the ground is his, the laborers are his, a...
So then, neither is he that planteth any thing - God alone should have all the glory, as the seed is his, the ground is his, the laborers are his, and the produce all comes from himself.
Calvin: 1Co 3:1 - -- 1.And I, brethren He begins to apply to the Corinthians themselves, that he had said respecting carnal persons, that they may understand that the fau...
1.And I, brethren He begins to apply to the Corinthians themselves, that he had said respecting carnal persons, that they may understand that the fault was their own — that the doctrine of the Cross had not more charms for them. It is probable, that in mercantile minds like theirs there was too much confidence and arrogance still lingering, so that it was not without much ado and great difficulty that they could bring themselves to embrace the simplicity of the gospel. Hence it was, that undervaluing the Apostle, and the divine efficacy of his preaching, they were more prepared to listen to those teachers that were subtle and showy, while destitute of the Spirit. 145 Hence, with the view of beating down so much the better their insolence, he declares, that they belong to the company of those who, stupefied by carnal sense, are not prepared to receive the spiritual wisdom of God. He softens down, it is true, the harshness of his reproach by calling them brethren, but at the same time he brings it forward expressly as a matter of reproach against them, that their minds were suffocated with the darkness of the flesh to such a degree that it formed a hindrance to his preaching among them. What sort of sound judgment then must they have, when they are not fit and prepared as yet even for hearing! He does not mean, however, that they were altogether carnal, so as to have not one spark of the Spirit of God — but that they had still greatly too much of carnal sense, so that the flesh prevailed over the Spirit, and did as it were drown out his light. Hence, although they were not altogether destitute of grace, yet, as they had more of the flesh than of the Spirit, they are on that account termed carnal This sufficiently appears from what he immediately adds — that they were babes in Christ; for they would not have been babes had they not been begotten, and that begetting is from the Spirit of God.
Babes in Christ This term is sometimes taken in a good sense, as it is by Peter, who exhorts us to be like new-born babes, (1Pe 2:2,) and in that saying of Christ,
Unless ye become as these little children,
ye shall not enter into the kingdom of God, (Luk 18:17.)
Here, however, it is taken in a bad sense, as referring to the understanding. For we must be children in malice, but not in understanding, as he says afterwards in 1Co 14:20, — a distinction which removes all occasion of doubt as to the meaning. To this also there is a corresponding passage in Eph 4:14.
That we be no longer children tossed to and fro with every wind of doctrine, and made the sport 146 of human fallacies, but may day by day grow up, etc

Calvin: 1Co 3:2 - -- 2.I have fed you with milk Here it is asked, whether Paul transformed Christ to suit the diversity of his hearers. I answer, that this refers to the ...
2.I have fed you with milk Here it is asked, whether Paul transformed Christ to suit the diversity of his hearers. I answer, that this refers to the manner and form of his instructions, rather than to the substance of the doctrine. For Christ is at once milk to babes, and strong meat to those that are of full age, (Heb 5:13,) the same truth of the gospel is administered to both, but so as to suit their capacity. Hence it is the part of a wise teacher to accommodate himself to the capacity of those whom he has undertaken to instruct, so that in dealing with the weak and ignorant, he begins with first principles, and does not go higher than they are able to follow, (Mar 4:33,) and so that, in short, he drops in his instructions by little and little, 147 lest it should run over, if poured in more abundantly. At the same time, those first principles will contain everything necessary to be known, no less than the farther advanced lessons that are communicated to those that are stronger. On this point read Augustine’s 98th homily on John. This tends to refute the specious pretext of some, who, while they do but mutter out, from fear of danger, something of the gospel in an indistinct manner, 148 pretend to have Paul’s example here. Meanwhile, they present Christ at such a distance, and covered over, besides, with so many disguises, that they constantly keep their followers in destructive ignorance. I shall say nothing of their mixing up many corruptions, their presenting Christ not simply in half, but torn to fragments, 149 their not merely concealing such gross idolatry, but confirming it also by their own example, and, if they have said anything that is good, straightway polluting it with numerous falsehoods. How unlike they are to Paul is sufficiently manifest; for milk is nourishment and not poison, and nourishment that is suitable and useful for bringing up children until they are farther advanced.
For ye were not yet able to bear it That they may not flatter themselves too much on their own discernment, he first of all tells them what he had found among them at the beginning, and then adds, what is still more severe, that the same faults remain among them to this day. For they ought at least, in putting on Christ, to have put off the flesh; and thus we see that Paul complains that the success which his doctrine ought to have had was impeded. For if the hearer does not occasion delay by his slowness, it is the part of a good teacher to be always going up higher, 150 till perfection has been attained.

Calvin: 1Co 3:3 - -- 3.For ye are as yet carnal So long as the flesh, that is to say, natural corruption, prevails in a man, it has so completely possession of the man’...
3.For ye are as yet carnal So long as the flesh, that is to say, natural corruption, prevails in a man, it has so completely possession of the man’s mind, that the wisdom of God finds no admittance. Hence, if we would make proficiency in the Lord’s school, we must first of all renounce our own judgment and our own will. Now, although among the Corinthians some sparks of piety were emitted, they were kept under by being choked. 151
For since there are among you The proof is derived from the effects; for as envying, and strifes, and divisions, are the fruits of the flesh, wherever they are seen, it is certain that the root is there in its rigor. Those evils prevailed among the Corinthians; and accordingly he proves from this that they are carnal He makes use of the same argument, too, in Gal 5:25 If ye live in the Spirit, walk also in the Spirit For while they were desirous to be regarded as spiritual, he calls them to look at their works, by which they denied what with their mouth they professed (Tit 1:16.) Observe, however, the elegant arrangement that Paul here pursues: for from envying spring up contentions, and these, when they have once been enkindled, break out into deadly sects: but the mother of all these evils is ambition.
Walk as men From this it is manifest that the term flesh is not restricted to the lower appetites merely, as the Sophists pretend, the seat of which they call sensuality, but is employed to describe man’s whole nature. For those that follow the guidance of nature, are not governed by the Spirit of God. These, according to the Apostle’s definition, are carnal, so that the flesh and man’s natural disposition are quite synonymous, and hence it is not without good reason that he elsewhere requires that we be new creatures in Christ (2Co 5:17.)

Calvin: 1Co 3:4 - -- 4.For while one saith He now specifies the particular kind of contentions, 152 and he does this by personating the Corinthians, that his description ...
4.For while one saith He now specifies the particular kind of contentions, 152 and he does this by personating the Corinthians, that his description may have more force — that each one gloried in his particular master, as though Christ were not the one Master of all (Mat 23:8.) Now, where such ambition still prevails, the gospel has little or no success. You are not, however, to understand that they declared this openly in express words, but the Apostle reproves those depraved dispositions to which they were given up. At the same time it is likely, that, as a predilection arising from ambition is usually accompanied with an empty talkativeness, 153 they openly discovered by their words the absurd bias of their mind, by extolling their teachers to the skies in magnificent terms, accompanying this at the same time with contempt of Paul and those like him.

Calvin: 1Co 3:5 - -- 5.Who then is Paul ? Here he begins to treat of the estimation in which ministers ought to be held, and the purpose for which they have been set apar...
5.Who then is Paul ? Here he begins to treat of the estimation in which ministers ought to be held, and the purpose for which they have been set apart by the Lord. He names himself and Apollos rather than others, that he may avoid any appearance of envy. 156 “What else,” says he, “are all ministers appointed for, but to bring you to faith through means of their preaching?” From this Paul infers, that no man ought to be gloried in, for faith allows of no glorying except in Christ alone. Hence those that extol men above measure, strip them of their true dignity. For the grand distinction of them all is, that they are ministers of faith, or, in other words, that they gain disciples to Christ, not to themselves. Now, though he appears in this way to depreciate the dignity of ministers, yet he does not assign it a lower place than it ought to hold. For he says much when he says, that we receive faith through their ministry. Nay farther, the efficacy of external doctrine receives here extraordinary commendation, when it is spoken of as the instrument of the Holy Spirit; and pastors are honored with no common title of distinction, when God is said to make use of them as his ministers, for dispensing the inestimable treasure of faith.
As the Lord hath given to every man In the Greek words used by Paul the particle of comparison

Calvin: 1Co 3:6 - -- 6.I have planted, Apollos watered He unfolds more clearly the nature of that ministry by a similitude, in which the nature of the word and the use of...
6.I have planted, Apollos watered He unfolds more clearly the nature of that ministry by a similitude, in which the nature of the word and the use of preaching are most appropriately depicted. That the earth may bring forth fruit, there is need of ploughing and sowing, and other means of culture; but after all this has been carefully done, the husbandman’s labor would be of no avail, did not the Lord from heaven give the increase, by the breaking forth of the sun, and still more by his wonderful and secret influence. Hence, although the diligence of the husbandman is not in vain, nor the seed that he throws in useless, yet it is only by the blessing of God that they are made to prosper, for what is more wonderful than that the seed, after it has rotted, springs up again! In like manner, the word of the Lord is seed that is in its own nature fruitful: ministers are as it were husbandmen, that plough and sow. Then follow other helps, as for example, irrigation. Ministers, too, act a corresponding part when, after casting the seed into the ground, they give help to the earth as much as is in their power, until it bring forth what it has conceived: but as for making their labor actually productive, that is a miracle of divine grace — not a work of human industry.
Observe, however, in this passage, how necessary the preaching of the word is, and how necessary the continuance of it. 158 It were, undoubtedly, as easy a thing for God to bless the earth without diligence on the part of men, so as to make it bring forth fruit of its own accord, as to draw out, or rather press out 159 its increase, at the expense of much assiduity on the part of men, and much sweat and sorrow; but as the Lord hath so ordained (1Co 9:14) that man should labor, and that the earth, on its part, yield a return to his culture, let us take care to act accordingly. In like manner, it were perfectly in the power of God, without the aid of men, if it so pleased him, to produce faith in persons while asleep; but he has appointed it otherwise, so that faith is produced by hearing. (Rom 10:17.) That man, then, who, in the neglect of this means, expects to attain faith, acts just as if the husbandman, throwing aside the plough, taking no care to sow; and leaving off all the labor of husbandry, were to open his mouth, expecting food to drop into it from heaven.
As to continuance 160 we see what Paul says here — that it is not enough that the seed be sown, if it is not brought forward from time to time by new helps. He, then, who has already received the seed, has still need of watering, nor must endeavors be left off, until full maturity has been attained, or in other words, till life is ended. Apollos, then, who succeeded Paul in the ministry of the word at Corinth, is said to have watered what he had sown.

Calvin: 1Co 3:7 - -- 7.Neither is he that planteth anything It appears, nevertheless, from what has been already said, that their labor is of some importance. We must obs...
7.Neither is he that planteth anything It appears, nevertheless, from what has been already said, that their labor is of some importance. We must observe, therefore, why it is that Paul thus depreciates it; and first of all, it is proper to notice that he is accustomed to speak in two different ways of ministers, 161 as well as of sacraments. For in some cases he views a minister as one that has been set apart by the Lord for, in the first instance, regenerating souls, and, afterwards, nourishing them up unto eternal life, for remitting sins, (Joh 20:23,) for renewing the minds of men, for raising up the kingdom of Christ, and destroying that of Satan. Viewed in that aspect he does not merely assign to him the duty of planting and watering, but furnishes him, besides, with the efficacy of the Holy Spirit, that his labor may not be in vain. Thus 162 in another passage he calls himself a minister of the Spirit, and not of the letter, inasmuch as he writes the word of the Lord on men’s hearts. (2Co 3:6.)
In other cases he views a minister as one that is a servant, not a master — an instrument, not the hand; and in short as man, not God. Viewed in that aspect, he leaves him nothing but his labor, and that, too, dead and powerless, if the Lord does not make it efficacious by his Spirit. The reason is, that when it is simply the ministry that is treated of, we must have an eye not merely to man, but also to God, working in him by the grace of the Spirit — not as though the grace of the Spirit were invariably tied to the word of man, but because Christ puts forth his power in the ministry which he has instituted, in such a manner that it is made evident, that it was not instituted in vain. In this manner he does not take away or diminish anything that belongs to Him, with the view of transferring it to man. For He is not separated from the minister, 163 but on the contrary His power is declared to be efficacious in the minister. But as we sometimes, in so far as our judgment is depraved, take occasion improperly from this to extol men too highly, we require to distinguish for the purpose of correcting this fault, and we must set the Lord on the one side, and the minister on the other, and then it becomes manifest, how indigent man is in himself, and how utterly devoid of efficacy.
Let it be known by us, therefore, that in this passage ministers are brought into comparison with the Lord, and the reason of this comparison is — that mankind, while estimating grudgingly the grace of God, are too lavish in their commendations of ministers, and in this manner they snatch away what is God’s, with the view of transferring it to themselves. At the same time he always observes a most becoming medium, for when he says, that God giveth the increase, he intimates by this, that the efforts of men themselves are not without success. The case is the same as to the sacraments, as we shall see elsewhere. 164 Hence, although our heavenly Father does not reject our labor in cultivating his field, and does not allow it to be unproductive, yet he will have its success depend exclusively upon his blessing, that he may have the entire praise. Accordingly, if we are desirous to make any progress in laboring, in striving, in pressing forward, let it be known by us, that we will make no progress, unless he prospers our labors, our strivings, and our assiduity, in order that we may commend ourselves, and everything we do to his grace.
Defender: 1Co 3:1 - -- There is thus a distinction between "spiritual" believers and "carnal" believers, the one controlled by the Spirit, the other still largely controlled...
There is thus a distinction between "spiritual" believers and "carnal" believers, the one controlled by the Spirit, the other still largely controlled by the flesh (Rom 8:5-13; Gal 5:16-25). Carnal Christians are not necessarily unsaved pseudo-Christians, although they need to examine themselves carefully to determine whether their profession of faith in Christ is genuine (2Co 13:5). Quite possibly they are just "babes in Christ" and need to "grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ" (2Pe 3:18)."

Defender: 1Co 3:2 - -- Baby Christians are wonderful to see, just like baby people; but if they remain babies indefinitely, they become tragic to behold. Spiritual growth re...
Baby Christians are wonderful to see, just like baby people; but if they remain babies indefinitely, they become tragic to behold. Spiritual growth requires, first, the milk of the word (1Pe 2:2), but then soon they should begin to partake of the strength-building meat of the word (Jer 15:16; Compare Heb 5:12-14)."

Defender: 1Co 3:6 - -- The soul-winner should rejoice when someone accepts Christ, but not boast, for it is God the Holy Spirit who has actually saved him. Those who sow, or...
The soul-winner should rejoice when someone accepts Christ, but not boast, for it is God the Holy Spirit who has actually saved him. Those who sow, or water, or reap may have a part, but the praise belongs only to God."

Defender: 1Co 3:7 - -- Although men are privileged to sow the gospel seed, salvation still remains the work of God, for "the seed is the word of God" (Luk 8:11). Similarly, ...
Although men are privileged to sow the gospel seed, salvation still remains the work of God, for "the seed is the word of God" (Luk 8:11). Similarly, men may water the ground, but the water also is the word of God, "for as the rain cometh down, and the snow from heaven... so shall my word be that goeth forth out of my mouth: it shall not return unto me void." (Isa 55:10, Isa 55:11)."
TSK: 1Co 3:1 - -- as unto spiritual : 1Co 2:6, 1Co 2:15; Gal 6:1
as unto carnal : 1Co 3:3, 1Co 3:4, 1Co 2:14; Mat 16:23; Rom 7:14
babes : 1Co 14:20; Eph 4:13, Eph 4:14;...

TSK: 1Co 3:3 - -- for whereas : 1Co 1:11, 1Co 6:1-8, 1Co 11:18; 2Co 12:20; Gal 5:15, Gal 5:19-21; Jam 3:16, Jam 4:1, Jam 4:2
divisions : or, factions
and walk : Hos 6:7...

TSK: 1Co 3:5 - -- ministers : 1Co 3:7, 1Co 4:1, 1Co 4:2; Luk 1:2; Rom 10:14, Rom 10:15; 2Co 3:6, 2Co 4:5, 2Co 4:7, 2Co 6:1, 2Co 6:4, 2Co 11:23
even : 1Co 3:10, 1Co 9:17...

TSK: 1Co 3:6 - -- I : 1Co 3:9, 1Co 3:10, 1Co 4:14, 1Co 4:15, 1Co 9:1, 1Co 9:7-11, 1Co 15:1-11; Act 18:4-11; 2Co 10:14, 2Co 10:15
Apollos : Pro 11:25; Act 18:24, Act 18:...
I : 1Co 3:9, 1Co 3:10, 1Co 4:14, 1Co 4:15, 1Co 9:1, 1Co 9:7-11, 1Co 15:1-11; Act 18:4-11; 2Co 10:14, 2Co 10:15
Apollos : Pro 11:25; Act 18:24, Act 18:26, Act 18:27, Act 19:1
God : 1Co 1:30, 1Co 15:10; Psa 62:9, Psa 62:11, Psa 92:13-15, Psa 127:1; Isa 55:10,Isa 55:11, Isa 61:11; Act 11:18, Act 14:27, Act 16:14, Act 21:19; Rom 15:18; 2Co 3:2-5; 1Th 1:5

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: 1Co 3:1 - -- And I, brethren - See 1Co 2:1. This is designed to meet an implied objection. He had said 1Co 2:14-16 that Christians were able to understand a...
And I, brethren - See 1Co 2:1. This is designed to meet an implied objection. He had said 1Co 2:14-16 that Christians were able to understand all things. Yet, they would recollect that he had not addressed them as such, but had confined himself to the more elementary parts of religion when he came among them. He had not entered upon the abstruse and difficult points of theology - the points of speculation in which the subtle Greeks so much abounded and so much delighted. He now states the reason why he had not done it. The reason was one that was most humbling to their pride; but it was the true reason, and faithfulness demanded that it should be stated. It was, that they were carnal, and not qualified to understand the deep mysteries of the gospel; and the proof of this was unhappily at hand. It was too evident in their contentions and strifes, that they were under the influence of carnal feelings and views.
Could not speak unto you as unto spiritual - "I could not regard you as spiritual - as qualified to enter into the full and higher truths of the gospel; I could not regard you as divested of the feelings which influence carnal people - the people of the world, and I addressed you accordingly. I could not discourse to you as to far-advanced and well-informed Christians. I taught you the rudiments only of the Christian religion."He refers here, doubtless, to his instructions when he founded the church at Corinth. See the note at 1Co 2:13-15.
But as unto carnal - The word "carnal"here
As unto babes in Christ - As unto those recently born into his kingdom, and unable to understand the profounder doctrines of the Christian religion. It is a common figure to apply the term infants and children to those who are feeble in understanding, or unable, from any cause, to comprehend the more profound instructions of science or religion.

Barnes: 1Co 3:2 - -- I have fed you with milk - Paul here continues the metaphor, which is derived from the custom of feeding infants with the lightest food. Milk h...
I have fed you with milk - Paul here continues the metaphor, which is derived from the custom of feeding infants with the lightest food. Milk here evidently denotes the more simple and elementary doctrines of Christianity - the doctrines of the new birth, of repentance, faith, etc. The same figure occurs in Heb 5:11-14; and also in Classical writers. See Wetstein.
And not with meat - "Meat"here denotes the more sublime and mysterious doctrines of religion.
For hitherto - Formerly, when I came among you, and laid the foundations of the church.
Not able to bear it - You were not sufficiently advanced in Christian knowledge to comprehend the higher mysteries of the gospel.
Neither yet now ... - The reason why they were not then able he proceeds immediately to state.

Barnes: 1Co 3:3 - -- For ye are yet carnal - Though you are Christians, and are the friends of God in the main, yet your divisions and strifes show that you are yet...
For ye are yet carnal - Though you are Christians, and are the friends of God in the main, yet your divisions and strifes show that you are yet, in some degree, under the influence of the principles which govern the people of this world. People who are governed solely by the principles of this world, evince a spirit of strife, emulation and contention; and just so far as you are engaged in strife, just so far do you show that you are governed by their principles and feelings.
For whereas - In proof that you are carnal I appeal to your contentions and strifes.
Envying -
And strife - Contention and dispute.
And divisions - Dissensions and quarrels. The margin correctly renders it "factions."The idea is, that they were split up into parties, and that those parties were embittered with mutual recriminations and reproaches, as they always are in a church.
And walk as men - Margin. "according to man."The word "walk"is used often in the Scriptures in the sense of "conduct"or "act."You conduct yourselves as human beings of this earth, that is, as people commonly do; you evince the same spirit that the great mass of mankind does. Instead of being filled with love; of being united and harmonious as the members of the same family ought to be, you are split up into factions as the people of the world are.

Barnes: 1Co 3:5 - -- Who then is Paul ... - See the notes at 1Co 1:13. Why should a party be formed which should be named after Paul? What has he done or taught tha...
Who then is Paul ... - See the notes at 1Co 1:13. Why should a party be formed which should be named after Paul? What has he done or taught that should lead to this? What eminence has he that should induce any to call themselves by his name? He is on a level with the other apostles; and all are but ministers, or servants, and have no claim to the honor of giving names to sects and parties. God is the fountain of all your blessings, and whoever may have been the "instrument"by whom you have believed, it is improper to regard them as, in any sense the fountain of your blessings, or to arrange yourselves under their name.
But ministers - Our word minister, as now used, does not express the proper force of this word. We in applying it to preachers of the gospel do not usually advert to the original sense of the word, and the reasons why it was given to them. The original word
By whom - Through whom
Even as the Lord gave to every man - God is the original source of faith; and it is by his influence that anyone is brought to believe; see the note at Rom 12:3, note at Rom 12:6. There were diversities of gifts among the Corinthian Christians, as there are in all Christians. And it is here implied:
(1) That all that anyone had was to be traced to God as its author;
(2) That he is a sovereign, and dispenses his favors to all as he pleases;
(3) That since God had conferred those favors, it was improper for the Corinthians to divide themselves into sects and call themselves by the name of their teachers, for all that they had was to be traced to God alone.
This idea, that all the gifts and graces which Christians had, were to be traced to God alone, was one which the apostle Paul often insisted on; and if this idea had been kept before the minds and hearts of all Christians, it would have prevented no small part of the contentions in the church, and the formation of no small part of the sects in the Christian world.

Barnes: 1Co 3:6 - -- I have planted - The apostle here compares the establishment of the church at Corinth to the planting of a vine, a tree, or of grain. The figur...
I have planted - The apostle here compares the establishment of the church at Corinth to the planting of a vine, a tree, or of grain. The figure is taken from agriculture, and the meaning is obvious. Paul established the church. He was the first preacher in Corinth; and if any distinction was due to anyone, it was rather to him than to the teachers who had labored there subsequently; but he regarded himself as worthy of no such honor as to be the head of a party, for it was not himself, but God who had given the increase.
Apollos watered - This figure is taken from the practice of watering a tender plant, or of watering a garden or field. This was necessary in a special manner in Eastern countries. Their fields became parched and dry from their long droughts, and it was necessary to irrigate them by artificial means. The sense here is, that Paul had labored in establishing the church at Corinth; but that subsequently Apollos had labored to increase it, and to build it, up. It is certain that Apollos did not go to Corinth until after Paul had left it; see Act 18:18; compare Act 18:27.
God gave the increase - God caused the seed sown to take root and spring up; and God blessed the irrigation of the tender plants as they sprung up, and caused them to grow. This idea is still taken from the farmer. It would be vain for the farmer to sow his seed unless God would give it life. There is no life in the seed, nor is there any inherent power in the earth to make it grow. Only God, the Giver of all life, can quicken the germ in the seed, and make it live. So it would be in vain for the farmer to water his plant unless God would bless it. There is no living principle in the water; no inherent power in the rains of heaven to make the plant grow. It is adapted, indeed, to this, and the seed would not germinate if it was not planted, nor grow if it was not watered; but the life is still from God. He arranged these means, and he gives life to the tender blade, and sustains it. And so it is with the word of life. It has no inherent power to produce effect by itself. The power is not in the naked word, nor in him that plants, nor in him that waters, nor in the heart where it is sown, but in God. But there is a Fitness of the means to the end. The word is adapted to save the soul. The seed must be sown or it will not germinate. Truth must be sown in the heart, and the heart must be prepared for it - as the earth must be plowed and made mellow, or it will not spring up. It must be cultivated with assiduous care, or it will produce nothing. But still it is all of God - as much so as the yellow harvest of the field, after all the toils of the farmer is of God. And as the farmer who has just views, will take no praise to himself because his grain and his vine start up and grow after all his care, but will ascribe all to God’ s unceasing, beneficent agency; so will the minister of religion, and so will every Christian, after all their care, ascribe all to God.

Barnes: 1Co 3:7 - -- Anything - This is to he taken comparatively. They are nothing in comparison with God! Their agency is of no importance compared with his: see ...
Anything - This is to he taken comparatively. They are nothing in comparison with God! Their agency is of no importance compared with his: see the note at 1Co 1:28. It does not mean that their agency ought not to be performed; that it is not important, and indispensable in its place; but that the honor is due to God - Their agency is indispensable. God could make seed or a tree grow if they were not planted in the earth. But He does not do it. The agency of the farmer is indispensable in the ordinary operations of His providence. If he does not plant, God will not make the grain or the tree grow. God blesses his labors; he does not work a miracle. God attends effort with success; God does not interfere in a miraculous manner to accommodate the indolence of people. So in the matter of salvation. The efforts of ministers would be of no avail without God. They could do nothing in the salvation of the soul unless God would give the increase. But their labors are as indispensable and as necessary, as are those of the farmer in the production of a harvest. And as every farmer could say, "my labors are nothing without God, who alone can give the increase,"so it is with every minister of the gospel.
Poole: 1Co 3:2 - -- Milk signifies what the apostle to the Hebrews calls the first principles of the oracles of God, and so is opposed to sublime spiritual doctrines,...
Milk signifies what the apostle to the Hebrews calls the first principles of the oracles of God, and so is opposed to sublime spiritual doctrines, here set out under the notion of meat; called strong meat, Heb 5:14 , fit for those of full age: as young children’ s stomachs will not endure strong meat, so neither are sublime spiritual mysteries fit for new converts, until they have senses exercised to discern good and evil; and therefore the apostle gives this as a reason, why he had not communicated the deep things of God to them, because as yet they had not been able to bear the notion of them, nor indeed were they yet able: it should seem that there were many in the church of Corinth, who though they were true Christians, yet were not grown and judicious Christians, but had great imperfections, as indeed it will further appear in this Epistle.

Poole: 1Co 3:3 - -- For ye are yet carnal not wholly carnal, but in a great measure so, not having your lusts and corrupt affections entirely subdued to the will of God,...
For ye are yet carnal not wholly carnal, but in a great measure so, not having your lusts and corrupt affections entirely subdued to the will of God, nor yet so much subdued as some other Christians have, and you ought to have. As an evidence of this he mindeth them of the
envying, strifes, and divisions that were amongst them.
Strife and envyings are reckoned amongst the works of the flesh, Gal 5:19-21 ; they are all opposite to love, in which the perfection of a Christian lieth. He told us before what strifes and contentions he meant, and tells us it again in the next verse.

Poole: 1Co 3:4 - -- Not that Christians so large a city as Corinth might not put themselves under several pastors, or, as to themselves, prefer one before another, eith...
Not that Christians so large a city as Corinth might not put themselves under several pastors, or, as to themselves, prefer one before another, either in respect of the more eminent gifts of God bestowed upon one, (as doubtless Paul was preferable to Apollos), or in respect of the more suitableness of one man’ s gifts to their capacities than another: but their adherence so to one minister of the gospel, that for his sake they vilified and despised all others, that were also true and faithful servants of God in the work of his gospel, this was their sin, and spake them to have vicious and corrupt affections, and to walk more like men than like saints, not having a true notion of the ministers of Christ, nor behaving themselves towards them as they ought to do.

Poole: 1Co 3:5 - -- Neither Paul, nor yet Apollos, are authors of faith to you, but only instruments; it is the Lord that giveth to every man a power to believe; or els...
Neither Paul, nor yet Apollos, are authors of faith to you, but only instruments; it is the Lord that giveth to every man a power to believe; or else that latter phrase,
as the Lord gave to every man may be understood of ministers, whose abilities to the work of the ministry, and success in it, both depend upon God. The sense of the words is this, then: God giveth unto his ministers variety of gifts, and different success; but yet neither one nor the other of them are more than the servants of Christ in their ministry, persons whom God maketh use of to call upon and to prevail with men, to give credit to the doctrine of the gospel, and to receive and accept of Christ. The work is the Lord’ s, not theirs.

Poole: 1Co 3:6 - -- God honoured me first to preach the gospel amongst you, Act 18:1-28 &c., and blessed my preaching to convert you unto Christ; then I left you: Apol...
God honoured me first to preach the gospel amongst you, Act 18:1-28 &c., and blessed my preaching to convert you unto Christ; then I left you: Apollos stayed behind, and he watered what I had planted daily preaching amongst you; see Act 18:24-26 ; he was a further means to build you up in faith and holiness; but God increased, or
gave the increase God gave the power by which you brought forth any fruit. The similitude is drawn from planters, whether husbandmen or gardeners; they plant, they water, but the growing, the budding, the bringing forth flowers or fruit by the plant, doth much more depend upon the soil in which it stands, the influence of heaven upon it, by the beams of the sun, and the drops of the dew and rain, and the internal virtue which the God of nature hath created in the plant, than upon the hand of him that planteth, or him who useth his watering pot to water it. So it is with souls; one minister is used for conversion, or the first changing of souls; another is used for edification, or further building up of souls; but both conversion and edification are infinitely more from the new heart and new nature, which God giveth to souls, and from the influence of the Sun of righteousness by the Spirit of grace, working in and upon the soul, than from any minister, who is but God’ s instrument in those works.

Poole: 1Co 3:7 - -- So that, look as it is in earthly plantations, God hath the greatest influence upon the growth and fruitfulness of the plant, and the husbandman or ...
So that, look as it is in earthly plantations, God hath the greatest influence upon the growth and fruitfulness of the plant, and the husbandman or gardener is nothing in comparison with God, who hath given to the plant planted its life and nature, by which it shooteth up, buddeth, and bringeth forth fruit, and maketh his sun to shine and his rain to fall upon it: so it is in the spiritual plantation, God is the principal efficient Cause, we are little instrumental causes in God’ s hand, nothing in comparison with God. I have planted, Apollos hath watered; but if we see a soul changed, or grow, and make any spiritual proficiency, we must say, Not unto us, O Lord, not unto us, but unto thy name be given the glory: God hath done the main work; we have not done any thing in comparison with him. These words do no more tend to vilify the ministry of the gospel, or make it useless, than, taking them in their native sense, as they respect earthly plantations, they would prove, that there is no need of the husbandman’ s or gardener’ s hand to plant or to water plants, because all that he doth of that nature is to no purpose, unless God first gives to the plant its proper nature and virtue, and then followeth the planting with the influence of the sun, dew, and rain. But yet it is observable, that the apostle doth not say, the man himself gives the increase, from the good use of the power that is naturally in his own will, but
God giveth the increase which argues the necessity of special grace both to conversion and edification, superadded to the best preaching of his ministers. Though Paul himself by preaching plants, and Apollos watereth, yet God must make the soul to increase with the increase of God. Hence the apostle argueth their unreasonableness, in adoring one minister, and magnifying him above another, when indeed neither the one nor the other had any principal efficiency in the production of the blessed effect, but a mere instrumental causation, the effect of which depended upon the sole blessing of God, in comparison with whom, in this working, neither the one nor the other minister was any thing.
PBC -> 1Co 3:5
PBC: 1Co 3:5 - -- The preacher does not cause one to believe. Paul prayed that the saints might know that it is the same mighty power of God which He wrought in Christ ...
The preacher does not cause one to believe. Paul prayed that the saints might know that it is the same mighty power of God which He wrought in Christ when He raised Him from the dead that caused them to believe. {Eph 1:19-20} No one can believe without evidence, or what he thinks is evidence. Now faith is the evidence of things not seen, and that is given to every subject of grace. It is the fruit of the Spirit, and " if any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of his." {Ro 8:9} When Paul or any other minister comes preaching the gospel of God’s grace, proclaiming the unsearchable riches of Christ, those who have been born again, who are subjects of grace, believe the truth which they never heard before, because they have faith, which is the evidence within them. " He that believeth on the Son of God hath the witness in himself." 1Jo 5:10. Cornelius believed those things which Peter preached and testified, because he had experienced them, and had in his own soul the substance of those things hoped for, the evidence of those things not seen by mortal eye. As soon as he heard those good tidings of salvation by grace through Jesus Christ he believed them at once; he needed no argument, no proof to the natural understanding; he knew the truth, which he had never heard until Peter told it to him, because he had the witness within.
If the preaching of the gospel caused the belief, then all who heard it would believe; but only those believe to whom the Lord has given the substance of what is preached in their own experience. Now faith is that substance, and therefore it is the evidence upon which belief is founded. As soon as the truth which has been experienced is heard it is believed at once. Some errors are so much like truth in appearance that the hearer will be in a quandary, and will study and argue and consider whether what he hears is truth, but when the true and certain sound is heard he does not stop to question, but feels at once assured in his soul. It is like listening for the sound of one’s own bell; he will hear one and another with an, " Is that it?" But when his own is sounded he does not inquire, but says at once, " That is it." The minister who first brings the truth to our ear is the one by whom we believe, but he had no power to cause our belief; that must be given as God has given to every man. The minister may have the tongue of an angel, but he cannot cause belief in the mind of any but those unto whom God has given in themselves the substance, evidence and power. Unto you it is given to believe on him. {Php 1:29}
Elder Silas H. Durand Nov. 6, 1906
Haydock: 1Co 3:3 - -- And walk according to man? As carnal and sensual men, as long as there are jealousies and divisions among you. (Witham)
And walk according to man? As carnal and sensual men, as long as there are jealousies and divisions among you. (Witham)

Haydock: 1Co 3:7-8 - -- That planteth you by your first conversion. Apollo watered you by preaching the same truths. ---
He that planteth and watered, are one, aim a...
That planteth you by your first conversion. Apollo watered you by preaching the same truths. ---
He that planteth and watered, are one, aim at one and the same end. (Witham) ---
According to his own labour. God does not recompense his servants according to the success of their labours, because their success depends upon him alone; but he recompenses them according to their sufferings and diligence in his service; for, whilst he crowns the labour of his apostles with success, he crowns his own work. (St. John Chrysostom) ---
This text most evidently proves that good works proceeding from grace are meritorious, and that the rewards in heaven are different, according as God sees just to appropriate them. The Greek word here employed is Greek: misthos, (merces) or wages. See 1 Timothy v. 18; Apocalypse xxii. 12; Matthew xvi. 27. It is by our union with Jesus Christ that our actions, of themselves without value or merit, become gold, silver, and precious stones. (Haydock)
Gill: 1Co 3:1 - -- And I, brethren, could not speak unto you,.... Though the apostle was a spiritual man himself, had spiritual gifts, even the extraordinary gifts of th...
And I, brethren, could not speak unto you,.... Though the apostle was a spiritual man himself, had spiritual gifts, even the extraordinary gifts of the Spirit, could judge all things, had the mind of Christ, and was able to speak the wisdom of God in a mystery, yet could not speak it to them,
as unto spiritual; not but that they had the Spirit of God in them, and a work of grace upon them; for they were, as the apostle afterwards says, the temple of God, and the Spirit of God dwelt in them; they were washed, sanctified, and justified, in the name of the Lord Jesus, and by the Spirit of our God; but had not that spiritual discerning, or judgment in spiritual things, which some believers had, at least when the apostle was first with them; and now they were under great spiritual declensions, and had not those spiritual frames, nor that spiritual experience and conversation, which some other Christians had:
but as unto carnal: not that they were in a carnal state, as unregenerate men are; but had carnal conceptions of things, were in carnal frames of soul, and walked in a carnal conversation with each other; though they were not in the flesh, in a state of nature, yet the flesh was in them, and not only lusted against the Spirit, but was very predominant in them, and carried them captive, so that they are denominated from it:
even as unto babes in Christ; they were in Christ, and so were new creatures; they were, as the Arabic version reads it, "in the faith of Christ"; though babes and weaklings in it, they were believers in Christ, converted persons, yet children in understanding, knowledge, and experience; had but little judgment in spiritual things, and were unskilful in the word of righteousness; at least this was the case of many of them, though others were enriched in all utterance and knowledge, and in no gift came behind members of other churches.

Gill: 1Co 3:2 - -- I have fed you with milk,.... It is usual with the Jews to compare the law to milk, and they say c, that
"as milk strengthens and nourishes an infa...
I have fed you with milk,.... It is usual with the Jews to compare the law to milk, and they say c, that
"as milk strengthens and nourishes an infant, so the law strengthens and nourishes the soul;''
but the apostle does not here mean
for hitherto ye were not able to bear it; they could not receive, relish, and digest it; it was too strong meat for them, they being weak in faith, and but babes in Christ; wherefore he prudently adapted things to their capacities, and that in perfect consistence with that faithfulness and integrity, for which he was so remarkable: for the Gospel he preached to them, which he calls "milk", was not another Gospel, or contrary to that which goes by the name of "meat": only the one consisted of truths more easily to be understood, and was delivered in a manner more suited to their capacities than the other: he adds,
neither yet now are ye able; which carries in it a charge of dulness and negligence, that they had been so long learning, and were improved no more in the knowledge of the truth; were as yet only in the alphabet of the Gospel, and needed to be afresh instructed in the first principles of the oracles of God; for anything beyond these was too high for them. The apostle seems to allude to the manner and custom of the Jews, in training up their children to learning; as to their age when they admit them scholars, their rule is this e,
"they introduce children (into the school) to be taught when six or seven years of age,
But sooner than this, a father is obliged to teach his child at home, concerning which they say f,
"from what time is his father obliged to teach him the law? as soon as he begins to speak, he teaches him the law Moses commanded us, and "hear O Israel", and after that he instructs him,
i.e. as he is able to take things in; and even till twelve years he was to be used with a great deal of tenderness:
"says R. Isaac g, at Usha they made an order, that a man should "use his son gently", until he is twelve years of age; the gloss upon it is, if his son refuses to learn, he shall use him

Gill: 1Co 3:3 - -- For ye are yet carnal,.... The Syriac reads it, בבסר אנתון, "ye are in the flesh": a phrase the apostle elsewhere uses of men in an unregener...
For ye are yet carnal,.... The Syriac reads it,
for whereas there is among you envying, and strife, and divisions, are ye not carnal, and walk as men? They envied each other's gifts and knowledge, strove about words to no profit, entered into warm debates and contentions about their ministers, and went into factions and parties, which were distinguished by the names they were most affected to; in all which they gave too clear evidence of their prevailing carnality, that they too much walked as other men, who make no profession of religion; that they were led by the judgment of men, and were carried away with human passions and inflections; and in their conduct could scarcely be distinguished from the rest of the world. The things that are here mentioned, and with which they are charged, are reckoned by the apostle among the works of the flesh, Gal 5:19 the phrase, "and divisions", is omitted in the Alexandrian copy, and in some others, and in the Vulgate Latin and Ethiopic versions.

Gill: 1Co 3:4 - -- For while one saith, I am of Paul,.... This shows what their envying and strife, and divisions were about, and from whence they sprung; and which serv...
For while one saith, I am of Paul,.... This shows what their envying and strife, and divisions were about, and from whence they sprung; and which serve, to strengthen the proof, and support the charge of carnality brought against them; for when one sort made a party for Paul, and set up him as their minister above all others; and said
another, I am of Apollos, preferring him for his eloquence above Paul, or any other preacher, as appears from 1Co 1:12 there was a third sort for Cephas, whom they cried up as superior to the other two, or any other man; and a fourth were for Christ, and despised all ministers whatever:
are ye not carnal? all this was a demonstration of it: they could never clear themselves from it, they must be convicted in their own consciences of it; to which the apostle appeals: the Alexandrian copy and the Vulgate Latin and Ethiopic versions read, "are ye not men?"

Gill: 1Co 3:5 - -- Who then is Paul? and who is Apollos?.... The apostle's name being used, and he a party concerned, could speak the more freely upon this head, and ask...
Who then is Paul? and who is Apollos?.... The apostle's name being used, and he a party concerned, could speak the more freely upon this head, and ask what they thought of himself, and other preachers, whether they were more than men? what authority and power they had, whether they looked upon them as the authors of a new religion, or the founders of a new sect, that were to go by their names? and directs them what light to consider them in, how that they were
but ministers by whom ye believed: they were servants to Christ and to his churches, and not lords; they did not assume any dominion over men, or pretend to lord it over God's heritage; there is but one Lord and master, and that is Christ, whom they served, and taught others to obey; they were only instrumental in the hand of God, by whom souls were directed, encouraged, and brought to believe in Christ; as for faith itself, that is the gift of God, the operation of his power, and of which Christ is the author and finisher; they laid no claim to this as their work, or imagined they had any dominion over it; that they could either implant it, or increase it of themselves; but thought it honour enough done them, that it came by their ministry; and that that, and the joy of it, were helped and furthered by their means: the Vulgate Latin version reads, "his ministers whom ye believed"; that is, the ministers of Christ, whom they believed in; not in the ministers, but Christ; the Arabic version renders it, "but two ministers, by whom ye believed"; referring to Paul and Apollos, who are meant:
even as the Lord gave to every man; gifts to minister with, and success to his ministry; making him useful to this and the other man, to bring him to the faith of Christ; all which is owing to the free grace and sovereign good will and pleasure of God.

Gill: 1Co 3:6 - -- I have planted,.... That is, ministerially; otherwise the planting of souls in Christ, and the implanting of grace in them, are things purely divine, ...
I have planted,.... That is, ministerially; otherwise the planting of souls in Christ, and the implanting of grace in them, are things purely divine, and peculiar to God, and the power of his grace; but his meaning is, that he was at Corinth, as in other places, the first that preached the Gospel to them; and was an instrument of the conversion of many souls, and of laying the foundation, and of raising and forming a Gospel church state, and of planting them in it;
Apollos watered; he followed after, and his ministry was blessed for edification; he was a means of carrying on the superstructure, and of building up souls in faith and holiness, and of making them fruitful in every good word and work: each minister of the Gospel has his proper gifts, work, and usefulness; some are planters, others waterers; some are employed in hewing down the sturdy oaks, and others in squaring and fitting, and laying them in the building; some are "Boanergeses", sons of thunder, and are mostly useful in conviction and conversion; and others are "Barnabases", sons of consolation, who are chiefly made use of in comforting and edifying the saints: but God gave the increase: for as the gardener may put his plants into the earth, and water them when he has so done, but cannot cause them to grow, this is owing to a divine blessing; and as the husbandman tills his ground, casts the seed into it, and waits for the former and latter rain, but cannot cause it to spring up, or increase to perfection, this is done by a superior influence; so ministers of the Gospel plant and water, cast in the seed of the word, preach the Gospel, but all the success is from the Lord; God only causes it to spring up and grow; it is he that gives it its increasing, spreading, fructifying virtue and efficacy.

Gill: 1Co 3:7 - -- So then, neither is he that planteth anything,.... Not that he is the happy instrument of beginning the good work:
neither he that watereth; who is...
So then, neither is he that planteth anything,.... Not that he is the happy instrument of beginning the good work:
neither he that watereth; who is the means of carrying of it on: not that they are simply and absolutely nothing, without any restriction and limitation; they are men, they are Christians, they are ministers, and useful ones, by whom others believe; they are labourers together with God, ministers of Christ, and stewards of the mysteries of God, and so to be accounted of; but they are nothing in themselves, nor in their own account, or with respect to God: they are nothing of themselves as ministers; they have nothing but what they have received; all their gifts are from God, nor can they exercise them aright without the grace of God, not being able to think a good thought as of themselves; nor are they anything in making their planting and watering effectual; and so no glory belongs to them; nothing is to be ascribed to them, they have no part or lot in these things:
but God that giveth the increase; he gives them their abilities, assists them in the exercise of their gifts, makes their ministrations useful, and he has, as he ought to have, all the glory.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: 1Co 3:2 Milk refers figuratively to basic or elementary Christian teaching. Paul’s point was that the Corinthian believers he was writing to here were n...

NET Notes: 1Co 3:3 Grk “and walking in accordance with man,” i.e., living like (fallen) humanity without the Spirit’s influence; hence, “unregene...

NET Notes: 1Co 3:4 Grk “are you not men,” i.e., (fallen) humanity without the Spirit’s influence. Here Paul does not say “walking in accordance w...


NET Notes: 1Co 3:6 The expression I planted is generally taken to mean that Paul founded the church at Corinth. Later Apollos had a significant ministry there (watered)....

Geneva Bible: 1Co 3:1 And ( 1 ) I, brethren, could not speak unto you as unto spiritual, but as unto ( a ) carnal, [even] as unto babes in Christ.
( 1 ) Having declared th...

Geneva Bible: 1Co 3:2 I have fed you with milk, and not with ( b ) meat: for hitherto ye were not ( c ) able [to bear it], neither yet now are ye able.
( b ) Substantial m...

Geneva Bible: 1Co 3:3 For ye are yet carnal: for whereas [there is] among you envying, and strife, and divisions, are ye not carnal, and walk as ( d ) men?
( d ) Using the...

Geneva Bible: 1Co 3:5 ( 2 ) Who then is Paul, and who [is] Apollos, but ministers by whom ye believed, even as the Lord gave to every man?
( 2 ) After he has sufficiently ...

Geneva Bible: 1Co 3:6 ( 3 ) I have planted, Apollos watered; but God gave the increase.
( 3 ) He beautifies the former sentence, with two similarities: first comparing the...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 1Co 3:1-23
TSK Synopsis: 1Co 3:1-23 - --1 Milk is fit for children.3 Strife and division, arguments of a fleshly mind.7 He that planteth and he that watereth, are nothing.9 The ministers are...
MHCC: 1Co 3:1-4 - --The most simple truths of the gospel, as to man's sinfulness and God's mercy, repentance towards God, and faith in our Lord Jesus Christ, stated in th...

MHCC: 1Co 3:5-9 - --The ministers about whom the Corinthians contended, were only instruments used by God. We should not put ministers into the place of God. He that plan...
Matthew Henry -> 1Co 3:1-4; 1Co 3:5-10
Matthew Henry: 1Co 3:1-4 - -- Here, I. Paul blames the Corinthians for their weakness and nonproficiency. Those who are sanctified are so only in part: there is still room for gr...

Matthew Henry: 1Co 3:5-10 - -- Here the apostle instructs them how to cure this humour, and rectify what was amiss among them upon this head, I. By reminding them that the ministe...
Barclay -> 1Co 3:1-9
Barclay: 1Co 3:1-9 - --Paul has just been talking about the difference between the man who is spiritual (pneumatikos, 4152), and who therefore can understand spiritual tru...
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 1:10--5:1 - --A. Divisions in the church 1:10-4:21
The first major problem was the divisions that were fragmenting the...

Constable: 1Co 3:1-4 - --4. The spiritual yet carnal condition 3:1-4
The apostle proceeded to tell the Corinthians that they had not been viewing things from the spiritual poi...

Constable: 1Co 3:5-17 - --5. The role of God's servants 3:5-17
Paul turned next to a positive explanation of how his reade...

Constable: 1Co 3:5-9 - --Fellow workers under God 3:5-9
"Besides evidencing a misapprehension of the gospel itself, the Corinthians' slogans bespeak a totally inadequate perce...
College -> 1Co 3:1-23
College: 1Co 3:1-23 - --1 CORINTHIANS 3
3. Divisions a Sign of Worldliness (3:1-4)
1 Brothers, I could not address you as spiritual but as worldly - mere infants in Christ....
McGarvey: 1Co 3:1 - --And I, brethren, could not speak unto you as unto spiritual, but as unto carnal, as unto babes in Christ . [The simplicity of Paul's instruction had g...

McGarvey: 1Co 3:2 - --I fed you with milk, not with meat, for ye were not yet able to bear it [he had merely grounded them in first principles, and had not enlightened them...

McGarvey: 1Co 3:3 - --for ye are yet carnal [showing undue reverence for men, etc.]: for whereas there is among you jealousy and strife, are ye not carnal [Gal 5:19-20 ; Ja...

McGarvey: 1Co 3:4 - --For when one saith, I am of Paul; and another, I am of Apollos; are ye not men? [Surely the Corinthians had no ground to argue with Paul as to their c...

McGarvey: 1Co 3:5 - --What [the neuter of disparagement] then is Apollos? and what is Paul? Ministers [literally, deacons, i. e., servitors -- Act 6:2 ; Col 1:7 ; not leade...

