
Text -- 1 Corinthians 6:14-20 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Robertson: 1Co 6:14 - -- Will raise up us ( hēmas exegerei ).
Future active indicative of exegeirō though the MSS. vary greatly, some having the present and some even t...
Will raise up us (
Future active indicative of

Robertson: 1Co 6:15 - -- Members of Christ ( melē Christou ).
Old word for limbs, members. Even the Stoics held the body to be common with the animals (Epictetus, Diss. l....
Members of Christ (
Old word for limbs, members. Even the Stoics held the body to be common with the animals (Epictetus, Diss. l. iii. 1) and only the reason like the gods. Without doubt some forms of modern evolution have contributed to the licentious views of animalistic sex indulgence, though the best teachers of biology show that in the higher animals monogamy is the rule. The body is not only adapted for Christ (1Co 6:13), but it is a part of Christ, in vital union with him. Paul will make much use of this figure further on (12:12-31; Eph 4:11-16; Eph 5:30).

Robertson: 1Co 6:15 - -- Shall I then take away? ( aras ouṉ ).
First aorist active participle of airō , old verb to snatch, carry off like Latin rapio (our rape).
Shall I then take away? (
First aorist active participle of

Robertson: 1Co 6:15 - -- Make ( poiēsō ).
Can be either future active indicative or first aorist active subjunctive (deliberative). Either makes good sense. The horror of...
Make (
Can be either future active indicative or first aorist active subjunctive (deliberative). Either makes good sense. The horror of deliberately taking "members of Christ"and making them "members of a harlot"in an actual union staggers Paul and should stagger us.

Robertson: 1Co 6:15 - -- God forbid ( mē genoito ).
Optative second aorist in a negative wish for the future.
God forbid (
Optative second aorist in a negative wish for the future.

Robertson: 1Co 6:15 - -- May it not happen!
The word "God"is not here. The idiom is common in Epictetus though rare in the lxx. Paul has it thirteen times and Luke once (Luk ...
May it not happen!
The word "God"is not here. The idiom is common in Epictetus though rare in the lxx. Paul has it thirteen times and Luke once (Luk 20:16).

Robertson: 1Co 6:16 - -- One body ( hen sōma ).
With the harlot. That union is for the harlot the same as with the wife. The words quoted from Gen 2:24 describing the sexua...

Robertson: 1Co 6:16 - -- Saith he ( phēsin ).
Supply either ho theos (God) or hē graphē (the Scripture).
Saith he (
Supply either

Robertson: 1Co 6:17 - -- One spirit ( hen pneuma ).
With the Lord, the inner vital spiritual union with the Lord Jesus (Eph 4:4; Eph 5:30).

Robertson: 1Co 6:18 - -- Flee ( pheugete ).
Present imperative. Have the habit of fleeing without delay or parley. Note abruptness of the asyndeton with no connectives. Forni...
Flee (
Present imperative. Have the habit of fleeing without delay or parley. Note abruptness of the asyndeton with no connectives. Fornication violates Christ’ s rights in our bodies (1Co 6:13-17) and also ruins the body itself.

Robertson: 1Co 6:18 - -- Without the body ( ektos tou sōmatos ).
Even gluttony and drunkenness and the use of dope are sins wrought on the body, not "within the body"(entos...
Without the body (
Even gluttony and drunkenness and the use of dope are sins wrought on the body, not "within the body"(

Robertson: 1Co 6:19 - -- Your body is a temple ( to sōma humōn naos estin ).
A sanctuary as in 1Co 3:16 which see. Our spirits dwell in our bodies and the Holy Spirit dwe...
Your body is a temple (
A sanctuary as in 1Co 3:16 which see. Our spirits dwell in our bodies and the Holy Spirit dwells in our spirits. Some of the Gnostics split hairs between the sins of the body and fellowship with God in the spirit. Paul will have none of this subterfuge. One’ s body is the very shrine for the Holy Spirit. In Corinth was the temple to Aphrodite in which fornication was regarded as consecration instead of desecration. Prostitutes were there as priestesses of Aphrodite, to help men worship the goddess by fornication.

Robertson: 1Co 6:19 - -- Ye are not your own ( ouk este heautōn ).
Predicate genitive. Ye do not belong to yourselves, even if you could commit fornication without personal...
Ye are not your own (
Predicate genitive. Ye do not belong to yourselves, even if you could commit fornication without personal contamination or self-violation. Christianity makes unchastity dishonour in both sexes. There is no double standard of morality. Paul’ s plea here is primarily to men to be clean as members of Christ’ s body.

Robertson: 1Co 6:20 - -- For ye were bought with a price ( ēgorasthēte gar timēs ).
First aorist passive indicative of agorazō , old verb to buy in the marketplace (a...
For ye were bought with a price (
First aorist passive indicative of

Robertson: 1Co 6:20 - -- Glorify God therefore in your body ( doxasate dē ton theon en tōi sōmati humōn ).
Passionate conclusion to his powerful argument against sexu...
Glorify God therefore in your body (
Passionate conclusion to his powerful argument against sexual uncleanness.
Vincent: 1Co 6:14 - -- Will raise up us
The body being destined to share with the body of Christ in resurrection, and to be raised up incorruptible, is the subject of a...
Will raise up us
The body being destined to share with the body of Christ in resurrection, and to be raised up incorruptible, is the subject of a higher adaptation, with which fornication is incompatible.

Vincent: 1Co 6:15 - -- Members of Christ
The body is not only for the Lord (1Co 6:13), adapted for Him: it is also united with Him. See Eph 4:16.

Vincent: 1Co 6:15 - -- Members of a harlot
The union of man and woman, whether lawful or unlawful, confers a double personality. Fornication effects this result in an i...
Members of a harlot
The union of man and woman, whether lawful or unlawful, confers a double personality. Fornication effects this result in an immoral way.

Vincent: 1Co 6:16 - -- He that is joined ( ὁ κολλώμενος )
See on Luk 15:15. Compare Aeschylus: " The family has been glued (κεκόλληται ) to...
He that is joined (
See on Luk 15:15. Compare Aeschylus: " The family has been glued (

Vincent: 1Co 6:16 - -- To a harlot ( τῇ πόρνῃ )
Lit., the harlot. The article is significant: his harlot, or that one with whom he is sinning at th...
To a harlot (
Lit., the harlot. The article is significant: his harlot, or that one with whom he is sinning at the time.

Vincent: 1Co 6:16 - -- Shall be one flesh ( ἔσονται εἰς σάρκα μίαν )
Lit., shall be unto one flesh: i.e., from being two, shall pass i...
Shall be one flesh (
Lit., shall be unto one flesh: i.e., from being two, shall pass into one. Hence Rev., rightly, shall become . Compare Eph 2:15.

Vincent: 1Co 6:18 - -- Flee
See Gen 39:12. Socrates, in Plato's " Republic," relates how the poet Sophocles, in answer to the question " How does love suit with age?" ...
Flee
See Gen 39:12. Socrates, in Plato's " Republic," relates how the poet Sophocles, in answer to the question " How does love suit with age?" replied: " Most gladly have I escaped that, and I feel as if I had escaped from a mad and furious master" (329).

Vincent: 1Co 6:18 - -- Without the body ( ἐκτὸς τοῦ σώματος )
Lit., outside . The body is not the instrument, but the subject. But in fornicatio...
Without the body (
Lit., outside . The body is not the instrument, but the subject. But in fornication the body is the instrument of the sin, and " inwardly as well as outwardly is made over to another."

And shall he make himself one flesh with an harlot?

Wesley: 1Co 6:18 - -- All unlawful commerce with women, with speed, with abhorrence, with all your might. Every sin that a man commits against his neighbour terminates upon...
All unlawful commerce with women, with speed, with abhorrence, with all your might. Every sin that a man commits against his neighbour terminates upon an object out of himself, and does not so immediately pollute his body, though it does his soul. But he that committeth fornication, sinneth against his own body - Pollutes, dishonours, and degrades it to a level with brute beasts.

Wesley: 1Co 6:19 - -- Dedicated to him, and inhabited by him. What the apostle calls elsewhere "the temple of God," 1Co 3:16-17, and "the temple of the living God," 2Co 6:1...
Dedicated to him, and inhabited by him. What the apostle calls elsewhere "the temple of God," 1Co 3:16-17, and "the temple of the living God," 2Co 6:16, he here styles the temple of the Holy Ghost; plainly showing that the Holy Ghost is the living God.

Wesley: 1Co 6:20 - -- Yield your bodies and all their members, as well as your souls and all their faculties, as instruments of righteousness to God. Devote and employ all ...
Yield your bodies and all their members, as well as your souls and all their faculties, as instruments of righteousness to God. Devote and employ all ye have, and all ye are, entirely, unreservedly, and for ever, to his glory.

JFB: 1Co 6:14 - -- Rather, "raised," to distinguish it from "will raise up us"; the Greek of the latter being a compound, the former a simple verb. Believers shall be ra...

JFB: 1Co 6:14 - -- Here he speaks of the possibility of his being found in the grave when Christ comes; elsewhere, of his being possibly found alive (1Th 4:17). In eithe...

JFB: 1Co 6:15 - -- Resuming the thought in 1Co 6:13, "the body is for the Lord" (1Co 12:27; Eph 4:12, Eph 4:15-16; Eph 5:30).
Resuming the thought in 1Co 6:13, "the body is for the Lord" (1Co 12:27; Eph 4:12, Eph 4:15-16; Eph 5:30).

JFB: 1Co 6:15 - -- Spontaneously alienating them from Christ. For they cannot be at the same time "the members of an harlot," and "of Christ" [BENGEL]. It is a fact no l...
Spontaneously alienating them from Christ. For they cannot be at the same time "the members of an harlot," and "of Christ" [BENGEL]. It is a fact no less certain than mysterious, that moral and spiritual ruin is caused by such sins; which human wisdom (when untaught by revelation) held to be actions as blameless as eating and drinking [CONYBEARE and HOWSON].

JFB: 1Co 6:16 - -- Justification of his having called fornicators "members of an harlot" (1Co 6:15).
Justification of his having called fornicators "members of an harlot" (1Co 6:15).

By carnal intercourse; literally, "cemented to": cleaving to.

JFB: 1Co 6:16 - -- God speaking by Adam (Gen 2:24; Mat 19:5). "He which made them at the beginning said," &c. (Eph 5:31).

JFB: 1Co 6:17 - -- With Him. In the case of union with a harlot, the fornicator becomes one "body" with her (not one "spirit," for the spirit which is normally the organ...
With Him. In the case of union with a harlot, the fornicator becomes one "body" with her (not one "spirit," for the spirit which is normally the organ of the Holy Spirit in man, is in the carnal so overlaid with what is sensual that it is ignored altogether). But the believer not only has his body sanctified by union with Christ's body, but also becomes "one spirit" with Him (Joh 15:1-7; Joh 17:21; 2Pe 1:4; compare Eph 5:23-32; Joh 3:6).


JFB: 1Co 6:18 - -- The Greek is forcible. "Every sin whatsoever that a man doeth." Every other sin; even gluttony, drunkenness, and self-murder are "without," that is, c...
The Greek is forcible. "Every sin whatsoever that a man doeth." Every other sin; even gluttony, drunkenness, and self-murder are "without," that is, comparatively external to the body (Mar 7:18; compare Pro 6:30-32). He certainly injures, but he does not alienate the body itself; the sin is not terminated in the body; he rather sins against the perishing accidents of the body (as the "belly," and the body's present temporary organization), and against the soul than against the body in its permanent essence, designed "for the Lord." "But" the fornicator alienates that body which is the Lord's, and makes it one with a harlot's body, and so "sinneth against his own body," that is, against the verity and nature of his body; not a mere effect on the body from without, but a contradiction of the truth of the body, wrought within itself [ALFORD].

JFB: 1Co 6:19 - -- Not "bodies." As in 1Co 3:17, he represented the whole company of believers (souls and bodies), that is, the Church, as "the temple of God," the Spiri...
Not "bodies." As in 1Co 3:17, he represented the whole company of believers (souls and bodies), that is, the Church, as "the temple of God," the Spirit; so here, the body of each individual of the Church is viewed as the ideal "temple of the Holy Ghost." So Joh 17:23, which proves that not only the Church, but also each member of it, is "the temple of the Holy Ghost." Still though many the several members form one temple, the whole collectively being that which each is in miniature individually. Just as the Jews had one temple only, so in the fullest sense all Christian churches and individual believers form one temple only. Thus "YOUR [plural] body" is distinguished here from "HIS OWN [particular or individual] body" (1Co 6:18). In sinning against the latter, the fornicator sins against "your (ideal) body," that of "Christ," whose "members your bodies" are (1Co 6:15). In this consists the sin of fornication, that it is a sacrilegious desecration of God's temple to profane uses. The unseen, but much more efficient, Spirit of God in the spiritual temple now takes the place of the visible Shekinah in the old material temple. The whole man is the temple; the soul is the inmost shrine; the understanding and heart, the holy place; and the body, the porch and exterior of the edifice. Chastity is the guardian of the temple to prevent anything unclean entering which might provoke the indwelling God to abandon it as defiled [TERTULLIAN, On the Apparel of Women]. None but God can claim a temple; here the Holy Ghost is assigned one; therefore the Holy Ghost is God.

JFB: 1Co 6:19 - -- The fornicator treats his body as if it were "his own," to give to a harlot if he pleases (1Co 6:18; compare 1Co 6:20). But we have no right to aliena...
The fornicator treats his body as if it were "his own," to give to a harlot if he pleases (1Co 6:18; compare 1Co 6:20). But we have no right to alienate our body which is the Lord's. In ancient servitude the person of the servant was wholly the property of the master, not his own. Purchase was one of the ways of acquiring a slave. Man has sold himself to sin (1Ki 21:20; Rom 7:14). Christ buys him to Himself, to serve Him (Rom 6:16-22).

JFB: 1Co 6:20 - -- Therefore Christ's blood is strictly a ransom paid to God's justice by the love of God in Christ for our redemption (Mat 20:28; Act 20:28; Gal 3:13; H...
Therefore Christ's blood is strictly a ransom paid to God's justice by the love of God in Christ for our redemption (Mat 20:28; Act 20:28; Gal 3:13; Heb 9:12; 1Pe 1:18-19; 2Pe 2:1; Rev 5:9). While He thus took off our obligation to punishment, He laid upon us a new obligation to obedience (1Co 7:22-23). If we accept Him as our Prophet to reveal God to us, and our Priest to atone for us, we must also accept Him as our King to rule over us as wholly His, presenting every token of our fealty (Isa 26:13).


JFB: 1Co 6:20 - -- Not in the oldest manuscripts and versions, and not needed for the sense, as the context refers mainly to the "body" (1Co 6:16, 1Co 6:18-19). The "spi...
Not in the oldest manuscripts and versions, and not needed for the sense, as the context refers mainly to the "body" (1Co 6:16, 1Co 6:18-19). The "spirit" is incidentally mentioned in 1Co 6:17, which perhaps gave rise to the interpolation, at first written in the Margin, afterwards inserted in the text.
Clarke: 1Co 6:14 - -- And God hath both raised up the Lord - He has raised up the human nature of Christ from the grave, as a pledge of our resurrection; and will also ra...
And God hath both raised up the Lord - He has raised up the human nature of Christ from the grave, as a pledge of our resurrection; and will also raise us up by his own power, that we may dwell with him in glory for ever.

Clarke: 1Co 6:15 - -- Know ye not that your bodies are the members of Christ? - Because he has taken your nature upon him, and thus, as believers in him, ye are the membe...
Know ye not that your bodies are the members of Christ? - Because he has taken your nature upon him, and thus, as believers in him, ye are the members of Christ

Clarke: 1Co 6:15 - -- Shall I then take, etc. - Shall we, who profess to be members of his body, of his flesh, and of his bones, connect ourselves with harlots, and thus ...
Shall I then take, etc. - Shall we, who profess to be members of his body, of his flesh, and of his bones, connect ourselves with harlots, and thus dishonor and pollute the bodies which are members of Christ? God forbid! These passages admit of a more literal interpretation. This, if given at all, I must give in a strange language
Membra humana, ad generationem pertinentia, vocantur Membra Christi, quia mysterium conjunctionis Christi et Ecclesiae per conjunctionem maris et faeminae indigitatur , Eph 5:32. In Vet. Test. idem valebat de membro masculino, guippe quod circumcisione, tanquam signo faederis, honoratum est . Vide Schoettgen, Hor. Hebr.

Clarke: 1Co 6:16 - -- He that is joined to a harlot is one body - In Sohar Genes., fol. 19, we have these remarkable words: Whosoever connects himself with another man...
He that is joined to a harlot is one body - In Sohar Genes., fol. 19, we have these remarkable words: Whosoever connects himself with another man’ s wife, does in effect renounce the holy blessed God, and the Church of the Israelites.

Clarke: 1Co 6:17 - -- Is one spirit - He who is united to God, by faith in Christ Jesus, receives his Spirit, and becomes a partaker of the Divine nature. Who can change ...
Is one spirit - He who is united to God, by faith in Christ Jesus, receives his Spirit, and becomes a partaker of the Divine nature. Who can change such a relationship for communion with a harlot; or for any kind of sensual gratification? He who can must be far and deeply fallen!

Clarke: 1Co 6:18 - -- Flee fornication - Abominate, detest, and escape from every kind of uncleanness. Some sins, or solicitations to sin, may be reasoned with; in the ab...
Flee fornication - Abominate, detest, and escape from every kind of uncleanness. Some sins, or solicitations to sin, may be reasoned with; in the above cases, if you parley you are undone; reason not, but Fly

Clarke: 1Co 6:18 - -- Sinneth against his own body - Though sin of every species has a tendency to destroy life, yet none are so mortal as those to which the apostle refe...
Sinneth against his own body - Though sin of every species has a tendency to destroy life, yet none are so mortal as those to which the apostle refers; they strike immediately at the basis of the constitution. By the just judgment of God, all these irregular and sinful connections are married to death. Neither prostitutes, whoremongers, nor unclean persons of any description, can live out half their days. It would be easy to show, and prove also, how the end of these things, even with respect to the body, is death; but I forbear, and shall finish the subject with the words of the prophet: The show of their countenance doth witness against them, and they declare their sin as Sodom, they hide it not; wo unto their soul, for they have rewarded evil unto themselves.

Clarke: 1Co 6:19 - -- Your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost - What an astonishing saying is this! As truly as the living God dwelt in the Mosaic tabernacle, and in th...
Your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost - What an astonishing saying is this! As truly as the living God dwelt in the Mosaic tabernacle, and in the temple of Solomon, so truly does the Holy Ghost dwell in the souls of genuine Christians; and as the temple and all its utensils were holy, separated from all common and profane uses, and dedicated alone to the service of God, so the bodies of genuine Christians are holy, and all their members should be employed in the service of God alone

Clarke: 1Co 6:19 - -- And ye are not your own? - Ye have no right over yourselves, to dispose either of your body, or any of its members, as you may think proper or lawfu...
And ye are not your own? - Ye have no right over yourselves, to dispose either of your body, or any of its members, as you may think proper or lawful; you are bound to God, and to him you are accountable.

Clarke: 1Co 6:20 - -- Ye are bought with a price - As the slave who is purchased by his master for a sum of money is the sole property of that master, so ye, being bought...
Ye are bought with a price - As the slave who is purchased by his master for a sum of money is the sole property of that master, so ye, being bought with the price of the blood of Christ, are not your own, you are his property. As the slave is bound to use all his skill and diligence for the emolument of his master, so you should employ body, soul, and spirit in the service of your Lord; promoting, by every means in your power, the honor and glory of your God, whom you must also consider as your Lord and Master
There are strange discordances in MSS., versions, and fathers, on the conclusion of this verse; and the clauses
Calvin: 1Co 6:14 - -- 14.And God hath also raised up the Lord He shows from Christ’s condition how unseemly fornication is for a Christian man; for Christ having been r...
14.And God hath also raised up the Lord He shows from Christ’s condition how unseemly fornication is for a Christian man; for Christ having been received into the heavenly glory, what has he in common with the pollutions of this world? Two things, however, are contained in these words. The first is, that it is unseemly and unlawful, that our body, which is consecrated to Christ, should be profaned by fornication, inasmuch as Christ himself has been raised up from the dead, that he might enter on the possession of the heavenly glory. The second is, that it is a base thing to prostitute our body 352 to earthly pollutions, while it is destined to be a partaker 353 along with Christ of a blessed immortality and of the heavenly glory. There is a similar statement in Col 3:1, If we have risen with Christ, etc., with this difference, that he speaks here of the last resurrection only, while in that passage he speaks of the first also, or in other words, of the grace of the Holy Spirit, by which we are fashioned again to a new life. As, however, the resurrection is a thing almost incredible (Act 26:8) to the human mind, when the Scripture makes mention of it, it reminds us of the power of God, with the view of confirming our faith in it. (Mat 22:29.)

Calvin: 1Co 6:15 - -- 15.Know ye not that our bodies are the members, etc. Here we have an explanation, or, if you prefer it, an amplification of the foregoing statement. ...
15.Know ye not that our bodies are the members, etc. Here we have an explanation, or, if you prefer it, an amplification of the foregoing statement. For that expression, the body is for the Lord, might, owing to its brevity, be somewhat obscure. Hence he says, as if with the view of explaining it, that Christ is joined with us and we with him in such a way, that we become one body with him. Accordingly, if I have connection with an harlot, I tear Christ in pieces, so far as it is in my power to do so; for it is impossible for me to draw Him into fellowship with such pollution. 354 Now as that must be held in abhorrence, 355 he makes use of the expression which he is accustomed to employ in reference to things that are absurd — God forbid 356 Observe, that the spiritual connection which we have with Christ belongs not merely to the soul, but also to the body, so that we are flesh of his flesh, etc (Eph 5:30.) Otherwise the hope of a resurrection were weak, if our connection were not of that nature — full and complete.

Calvin: 1Co 6:16 - -- 16.Know ye not that he that is joined to an harlot He brings out more fully the greatness of the injury that is done to Christ by the man that has in...
16.Know ye not that he that is joined to an harlot He brings out more fully the greatness of the injury that is done to Christ by the man that has intercourse with an harlot; for he becomes one body, and hence he tears away a member from Christ’s body. It is not certain in what sense he accommodates to his design the quotation which he subjoins from Gen 2:24. For if he quotes it to prove that two persons who commit fornication together become one flesh, he turns it aside from its true meaning to what is quite foreign to it. For Moses speaks there not of a base and prohibited cohabitation of a man and a woman, but of the marriage connection which God blesses. For he shows that that bond is so close and indissoluble, that it surpasses the relationship which subsists between a father and a son, which, assuredly, can have no reference to fornication. This consideration has led me sometimes to think, that this quotation is not brought forward to confirm the immediately preceding statement, but one that is more remote, in this way — “Moses says, that by the marriage connection husband and wife become one flesh, but he that is jointed to the Lord becomes not merely one flesh, but one spirit with him.” 357 And in this way the whole of this passage would tend to magnify the efficacy and dignity of the spiritual marriage which subsists between us and Christ.
If, however, any one does not altogether approve of this exposition, as being rather forced, I shall bring forward another. For as fornication is the corruption of a divine institution, it has some resemblance to it; and what is affirmed respecting the former, may to some extent be applied to the latter; not that it may be honored with the praises due to the former, 358 but for the purpose of expressing the more fully the heinousness of the sin. The expression, therefore, that they two become one flesh, is applicable in the true and proper sense to married persons only; but it is applied to fornicators, who are joined in a polluted and impure fellowship, meaning that contagion passes from the one to the other. 359 For there is no absurdity in saying that fornication bears some resemblance to the sacred connection of marriage, as being a corruption of it, as I have said; but the former has a curse upon it, and the other a blessing. Such is the correspondence between things that are contrasted in an antithesis. At the same time, I would prefer to understand it, in the first instance, of marriage, and then, in an improper sense, 360 of fornication, in this way — “God pronounces husband and wife to be one flesh, in order that neither of them may have connection with another flesh; so that the adulterer and adulteress do, also, become one flesh, and involve themselves in an accursed connection. And certainly this is more simple, and agrees better with the context.

Calvin: 1Co 6:17 - -- 17.He that is joined to the Lord He has added this to show that our connection with Christ is closer than that of a husband and wife, and that the fo...
17.He that is joined to the Lord He has added this to show that our connection with Christ is closer than that of a husband and wife, and that the former, accordingly, must be greatly preferred before the latter, so that it must be maintained with the utmost chastity and fidelity. For if he who is joined to a woman in marriage ought not to have illicit connection with an harlot, much more heinous were this crime in believers, who are not merely one flesh with Christ, but also one spirit Thus there is a comparison between greater and less.

Calvin: 1Co 6:18 - -- 18.=== Flee fornication === Every sin, etc. Having set before us honorable conduct, he now shows how much we ought to abhor fornication, setting bef...
18.=== Flee fornication === Every sin, etc. Having set before us honorable conduct, he now shows how much we ought to abhor fornication, setting before us the enormity of its wickedness and baseness. Now he shows its greatness by comparison — that this sin alone, of all sins, puts a brand of disgrace upon the body. The body, it is true, is defiled also by theft, and murder, and drunkenness, in accordance with those statements —
Your hands are defiled with blood. (Isa 1:15.)
You have yielded your members instruments of iniquity unto sin,
(Rom 6:19,)
and the like. Hence some, in order to avoid this inconsistency, understand the words rendered against his own body, as meaning against us, as being connected with Christ; but this appears to me to be more ingenious than solid. Besides, they do not escape even in this way, because that same thing, too, might be affirmed of idolatry equally with fornication. For he who prostrates himself before an idol, sins against connection with Christ. Hence I explain it in this way, that he does not altogether deny that there are other vices, in like manner, by which our body is dishonored and disgraced, but that his meaning is simply this — that defilement does not attach itself to our body from other vices in the same way 361 as it does from fornication My hand, it is true, is defiled by theft or murder, my tongue by evil speaking, or perjury, 362 and the whole body by drunkenness; but fornication leaves a stain impressed upon the body, such as is not impressed upon it from other sins. According to this comparison, or, in other words, in the sense of less and more, other sins are said to be without the body — not, however, as though they do not at all affect the body, viewing each one by itself.

Calvin: 1Co 6:19 - -- 19.Know ye not that your body He makes use of two additional arguments, in order to deter us from this filthiness. First, That our bodies are templ...
19.Know ye not that your body He makes use of two additional arguments, in order to deter us from this filthiness. First, That our bodies are temples of the Spirit; and, secondly, that the Lord has bought us to himself as his property. There is an emphasis implied in the term temple; for as the Spirit of God cannot take up his abode in a place that is profane, we do not give him a habitation otherwise than by consecrating ourselves to him as temples It is a great honor that God confers upon us when he desires to dwell in us. (Psa 132:14.) Hence we ought so much the more to fear, lest he should depart from us, offended by our sacrilegious actings. 363
And ye are not your own Here we have a second argument — that we are not at our own disposal, that we should live according to our own pleasure. He proves this from the fact that the Lord has purchased us for himself, by paying the price of our redemption. There is a similar statement in Rom 14:9
To this end Christ died and rose again, that he might be Lord of the living and the dead.
Now the word rendered price may be taken in two ways; either simply, as we commonly say of anything that it has cost a price, 364 when we mean that it has not been got for nothing; or, as used instead of the adverb
Ye are redeemed, not with gold and silver, but with the precious 365 blood of the Lamb, without spot. (1Pe 1:18.)
The sum is this, 366 that redemption must hold us bound, and with a bridle of obedience restrain the lasciviousness of our flesh.

Calvin: 1Co 6:20 - -- 20.Glorify God From this conclusion, it appears that the Corinthians took a liberty to themselves in outward things, that it was necessary to restrai...
20.Glorify God From this conclusion, it appears that the Corinthians took a liberty to themselves in outward things, that it was necessary to restrain and bridle. The reproof therefore is this he allows that the body is subject to God no less than the soul, and that accordingly it is reasonable that both be devoted to his glory. “As it is befitting that the mind of a believer should be pure, so there must be a corresponding outward profession also before men, inasmuch as the power of both is in the hands of God, who has redeemed both.” With the same view he declared a little ago, that not only our souls but our bodies also are temples of the Holy Spirit, that we may not think that we discharge our duty to him aright, if we do not devote ourselves wholly and entirely to his service, that he may by his word regulate even the outward actions of our life.
Defender: 1Co 6:18 - -- In Biblical usage, "fornication" can mean any sexual congress outside monogamous marriage. It thus includes not only premarital sex, but also adultery...
In Biblical usage, "fornication" can mean any sexual congress outside monogamous marriage. It thus includes not only premarital sex, but also adultery, homosexual acts, incest, remarriage after un-Biblical divorce, and sexual acts with animals, all of which are explicitly forbidden in the law as given through Moses (Lev 20:10-21). Christ expanded the prohibition against adultery to include even sexual lusting (Mat 5:28)."

Defender: 1Co 6:19 - -- This is the classic verse which teaches that a Christian's body belongs to God, not to himself or herself. Since our "bodies are the members of Christ...
This is the classic verse which teaches that a Christian's body belongs to God, not to himself or herself. Since our "bodies are the members of Christ" (1Co 6:15), we have no right to unite them with some other body in any sexual relation outside of monogamous marriage. Such an act becomes a sin "against his own body" (1Co 6:18), which could easily result in one of many sexually transmitted diseases, not to mention psychological disorders."

Defender: 1Co 6:20 - -- The purchase price of our bodies was the infinitely precious shed blood of Christ (1Co 6:19, 1Co 6:20). Realization of this fact provides another very...
TSK: 1Co 6:14 - -- God : 1Co 15:15-20; Act 2:24, Act 17:31; Rom 6:4-8, Rom 8:11; 2Co 4:14; Phi 3:10,Phi 3:11; 1Th 4:14
by : Joh 5:28, Joh 5:29, Joh 6:39, Joh 6:40, Joh 1...

TSK: 1Co 6:15 - -- your : 1Co 6:19, 1Co 11:3, 1Co 12:27; Rom 12:5; Eph 1:22, Eph 1:23, Eph 4:12, Eph 4:15, Eph 4:16, Eph 5:23, Eph 5:30; Col 2:19
God : Gen 44:17; Luk 20...

TSK: 1Co 6:16 - -- an harlot : Gen 34:31, Gen 38:15, Gen 38:24; Jdg 16:1; Mat 21:31, Mat 21:32; Heb 11:31
for : Gen 2:24; Mat 19:5, Mat 19:6; Mar 10:8; Eph 5:31


TSK: 1Co 6:18 - -- Flee : Gen 39:12-18; Pro 2:16-19, Pro 5:3-15, Pro 6:24-32, 7:5-23, Pro 7:24-27, Pro 9:16-18; Rom 6:12, Rom 6:13; 2Ti 2:22; Heb 13:4; 1Pe 2:11
sinneth ...
Flee : Gen 39:12-18; Pro 2:16-19, Pro 5:3-15, Pro 6:24-32, 7:5-23, Pro 7:24-27, Pro 9:16-18; Rom 6:12, Rom 6:13; 2Ti 2:22; Heb 13:4; 1Pe 2:11

TSK: 1Co 6:19 - -- What : 1Co 6:15, 1Co 6:16
your body : 1Co 3:16; 2Co 6:16; Eph 2:21, Eph 2:22; 1Pe 2:5
and ye : 1Ki 20:4; 1Ch 29:14; Psa 12:4, Psa 100:3; Rom 14:7-9; 2...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: 1Co 6:14 - -- And God hath both raised up ... - This is the "second"argument against indulgences in this sin. It is this. "We are united to Christ. God has r...
And God hath both raised up ... - This is the "second"argument against indulgences in this sin. It is this. "We are united to Christ. God has raised him from the dead, and made his body glorified. Our bodies will be like his (compare Phi 3:21); and since our body is to be raised up by the power of God; since it is to be perfectly pure and holy, and since this is to be done by his agency, it is wrong that it should be devoted to purposes of pollution and lust."It is unworthy:
(1) Of our connection with that pure Saviour who has been raised from the dead - the image of our resurrection from the death and defilements of sin (compare the notes at Rom 6:1-12); and,
(2) Unworthy of the hope that our bodies shall be raised up to perfect and immortal purity in the heavens. No argument could be stronger. A deep sense of our union with a pure and risen Saviour, and a lively hope of immortal purity, would do more than all other things to restrain from licentious indulgences.

Barnes: 1Co 6:15-16 - -- Know ye not ... - This is the third argument against licentiousness. It is, that we as Christians are united to Christ (compare the notes at Jo...
Know ye not ... - This is the third argument against licentiousness. It is, that we as Christians are united to Christ (compare the notes at Joh 15:1 ff); and that it is abominable to take the members of Christ and subject them to pollution and sin. Christ was pure - wholly pure. We are professedly united to him. We are bound therefore to be pure, as he was. Shall that which is a part, as it were, of the pure and holy Saviour, be prostituted to impure and unholy embraces?
God forbid! - See the note at Rom 3:4. This expresses the deep abhorrence of the apostle at the thought. It needed not argument to show it. The whole world revolted at the idea; and language could scarcely express the abomination of the very thought.
Know ye not ... - This is designed to confirm and strengthen what he had just said.
He which is joined - Who is attached to; or who is connected with.
Is one body - That is, is to he regarded as one; is closely and intimately united. Similar expressions occur in Classic writers. See Grotius and Bloomfield.
For two, saith he ... - This Paul illustrates by a reference to the formation of the marriage connection in Ger. Rom 2:14. He cannot be understood as affirming that that passage had original reference to illicit connections; but be uses it for purposes of illustration. God had declared that the man and his wife became one; in a similar sense in unlawful connections the parties became one.

Barnes: 1Co 6:17 - -- But he that is joined to the Lord - The true Christian, united by faith to the Lord Jesus; see Joh 15:1 ff. Is one spirit - That is, in a...
But he that is joined to the Lord - The true Christian, united by faith to the Lord Jesus; see Joh 15:1 ff.
Is one spirit - That is, in a sense similar to that in which a man and his wife are one body. It is not to be taken literally; but the sense is, that there is a close and intimate union; they are united in feeling, spirit, intention, disposition. The argument is beautiful. It is, "As the union of souls is more important than that of bodies; as that union is more lasting, dear, and enduring than any union of body with body can be, and as our union with him is with a Spirit pure and holy, it is improper that we should sever that tie, and break that sacred bond, by being joined to a harlot. The union with Christ is more intimate, entire, and pure than that can be between a man and woman; and that union should be regarded as sacred and inviolable."O, if all Christians felt and regarded this as they should, how would they shrink from the connections which they often form on earth! Compare Eph 4:4.

Barnes: 1Co 6:18 - -- Flee fornication - A solemn command of God - as explicit as any that thundered from Mount Sinai. None can disregard it with impunity - none can...
Flee fornication - A solemn command of God - as explicit as any that thundered from Mount Sinai. None can disregard it with impunity - none can violate it without being exposed to the awful vengeance of the Almighty. There is force and emphasis in the word "flee"
Every sin ... - This is to be taken comparatively. Sins in general; the common sins which people commit do not immediately and directly affect the body, or waste its energies, and destroy life. Such is the case with falsehood, theft, malice, dishonesty, pride, ambition, etc. They do not immediately and directly impair the constitution amid waste its energies.
Is without the body - Does not immediately and directly affect the body. The more immediate effect is on the mind; but the sin under consideration produces an immediate and direct effect on the body itself.
Sinneth against his own body - This is the FourTH argument against indulgence in this vice; and it is more striking and forcible. The sense is, "It wastes the bodily energies; produces feebleness, weakness, and disease; it impairs the strength, enervates the man, and shortens life."Were it proper, this might be proveD to the satisfaction of every man by an examination of the effects of licentious indulgence. Those who wish to see the effects stated may find them in Dr. Rush on the Diseases of the Mind . Perhaps no single sin has done so much to produce the most painful and dreadful diseases, to weaken the constitution, and to shorten life as this. Other vices, as gluttony and drunkenness, do this also, and all sin has some effect in destroying the body, but it is true of this sin in an eminent degree.

Barnes: 1Co 6:19 - -- What! know ye not ... - This is the fifth argument against this sin. The Holy Spirit dwells in us; our bodies are his temples; and they should ...
What! know ye not ... - This is the fifth argument against this sin. The Holy Spirit dwells in us; our bodies are his temples; and they should not be defiled and polluted by sin; see the note at 1Co 3:16-17. As this Spirit is in us, and as it is given us by God, we ought not to dishonor the gift and the giver by pollution and vice.
And ye are not your own - This is the sixth argument which Paul uses. We are purchased; we belong to God; we are his by redemption; by a precious price paid; and we are bound, therefore, to devote ourselves, body, soul, and spirit, as he directs, to the glory of his name, not to the gratification of the flesh; see the note at Rom 14:7-8.

Barnes: 1Co 6:20 - -- For ye are bought - Ye Christians are purchaseD; and by right of purchase should therefore be employed as he directs. This doctrine is often ta...
For ye are bought - Ye Christians are purchaseD; and by right of purchase should therefore be employed as he directs. This doctrine is often taught in the New Testament, and the argument is often urged that, therefore, Christians should be devoted to God; see 1Co 7:23; 1Pe 1:18-19; 1Pe 2:9; 2Pe 2:1; Rev 5:9; see the note at Act 20:28.
With a price -
(1) That Christians have been redeemed, or recovered to God;
\caps1 (2) t\caps0 hat this has been done by a "valuable consideration,"or that which, in his view, was a full equivalent for the sufferings that they would have endured if they had suffered the penalty of the law;
(3) That this valuable consideration was the blood of Jesus, as an atoning sacrifice, an offering, a ransom, which "would accomplish the same great ends in maintaining the truth and honor of God, and the majesty of his law, as the eternal condemnation of the sinner would have done;"and which, therefore, may be called, figuratively, the price which was paid. For if the same ends of justice could be accomplished by his atonement which would have been by the death of the sinner himself, then it was consistent for God to pardon him.
\caps1 (4) n\caps0 othing else could or would have done this. There was no price which the sinner could pay, no atonement which he could make; and consequently, if Christ had not died, the sinner would have been the slave of sin, and the servant of the devil forever.
\caps1 (5) a\caps0 s the Christian is thus purchased, ransomed, redeemed, he is bound to devote himself to God only, and to keep his commands, and to flee from a licentious life.
Glorify God - Honor God; live to him; see the Mat 5:16 note; Joh 12:28; Joh 17:1 notes.
In your body ... - Let your entire person be subservient to the glory of God. Live to him; let your life tend to his honor. No stronger arguments could be adduced for purity of life, and they are such as all Christians must feel.
Remarks On 1 Corinthians 6
1. We see from this chapter \caps1 1Co 6:1-8. t\caps0 he evils of lawsuits, and of contentions among Christians. Every lawsuit between Christians is the means of greater or less dishonor to the cause of religion. The contention and strife; the time lost and the money wasted; the hard feelings engendered, and bitter speeches caused; the ruffled temper, and the lasting animosities that are produced, always injure the cause of religion, and often injure it for years. Probably no lawsuit was ever engaged in by a Christian that did not do some injury to the cause of Christ. Perhaps no lawsuit; was ever conducted between Christians that ever did any good to the cause of Christ.
2. A contentious spirit, a fondness for the agitation, the excitement, and the strife of courts, is inconsistent with the spirit of the gospel. Religion is supposed to be retiring, peaceful, and calm. It seeks the peace of all, and it never rejoices in contentions.
3. Christians should do nothing that will tend to injure the cause of religion in the eye of the world, 1Co 6:7-8. How much better is it that I should lose a few pounds, than that my Saviour should lose his honor! How much better that my purse should be empty of glittering dust, even by the injustice of others, than that a single gem should be taken from his diadem! And how much better even that I should lose all, than that "my"hand should be reached out to pluck away one jewel, by my misconduct, from his crown! Can silver, can gold, can diamonds be compared in value to the honor of Christ and of his cause?
4. Christians should seldom go to law, even with others; never, if they can avoid it. Every other means should be tried first, and the law should be resorted to only when all else fails. How few lawsuits there would be if man had no bad passions! How seldom is the law applied to from the simple love of justice; how seldom from pure benevolence; how seldom foe the glory of God! In nearly all cases that occur between men, a friendly reference to others would settle all the difficulty; always if there were a right spirit between the parties. Comparatively few suits at law will be approved of, when people come to die; and the man who has had the least to do with the law, will have the least, usually, to regret when he enters the eternal world.
5. Christians should be honest - strictly honest - always honest, 1Co 6:8. They should do justice to all; they should defraud none. Few things occur that do more to disgrace religion than the suspicions of fraud, and overreaching, and deception, that often rest on professors of religion. How can a man be a Christian, and not be an honest man? Every man who is not strictly honest and honorable in his dealings, should be regarded, whatever may be his pretensions, as an enemy of Christ and his cause.
6. The unholy cannot be saved, 1Co 6:9-10. So God has determined; and this purpose cannot be evaded or escaped. It is fixed; and men may think of it as they please, still it is true that there are large classes of people who, if they continue such, cannot inherit the kingdom of God. The fornicator, the idolater, the drunkard, and the covetous, cannot enter heaven. So the Judge of all has said, and who can unsay it? So he has decreed, and who can change his fixed decree? And so it should be. What a place would heaven be if the drunkard, and the adulterer, and the idolater were there! How impure and unholy would it be! How would it destroy all our hopes, dim all our prospects, mar all our joys, if we were told that they should sit down with the just in heaven! Is it not one of our fondest hopes that heaven will be pure, and that all its inhabitants shall be holy? And can God admit to his eternal embrace, and treat as his eternal friend, the man who is unholy; whose life is stained with abomination; who loves to corrupt others; and whose happiness is found in the sorrows, and the wretchedness, and vices of others? No, true religion is pure, and heaven is pure; and whatever people may think. Of one thing they may be assured, that the fornicator, and the drunkard, and the reviler shall not inherit the kingdom of God.
7. If none of these can be saved as they are, what a host are traveling down to hell! How large a part of every community is made up of such persons! How vast is the number of drunkards that are known! How vast the host of extortioners, and of covetous people, and revilers of all that is good! How many curse their God and their fellow man! How difficult to turn the corner of a street without hearing an oath! How necessary to guard against the frauds and deceptions of others! How many men and women are known to be impure in their lives! In all communities how much does this sin abound! and how many shall be revealed at the great Day as impure, who are now unsuspected! how many disclosed to the universe as all covered with pollution, who now boast even of purity, and who are received into the society of the virtuous and the lovely! Verily, the broad road to hell is thronged! And verily, the earth is pouring into hell a most dense and wretched population, and rolling down a tide of sin and misery that shall fill it with groans and gnashing of teeth forever.
8. It is well for Christians to reflect on their former course of life, as contrasted with their present mercies, 1Co 6:11. Such were they, and such they would still have been but for the mercy of God. Such as is the victim of uncleanness and pollution, such as is the profane man and the reviler, such we should have been but for the mercy of God. That alone has saved us, and that only can keep us. How should we praise God for his mercy, and how are we bound to love and serve him for his amazing compassion in raising us from our deep pollution, and saving us from hell?
9. Christians should be pure; 1Co 6:11-19. They should be above suspicion. They should avoid the appearance of evil. No Christian can be too pure; none can feel too much the obligation to he holy. By every sacred and tender consideration God urges it on us; and by a reference to our own happiness as well as to his own glory, he calls on us to be holy in our lives.
10. May we remember that we are not our own; 1Co 6:20. We belong to God. We have been ransomed by sacred blood. By a reference to the value of that blood; by all its preciousness and worth; by all the sighs, and tears, and groans that bought us; by the agonies of the cross, and the bitter pains of the death of God’ s own Son, we are bound to live to God, and to him alone. When we are tempted to sin, let us think of the cross. When Satan spreads out his allurements, let us recall the remembrance of the sufferings of Calvary, and remember that all these sorrows were endured so that we might be pure. O how would sin appear were we beneath the cross, and did we feel the warm blood from the Saviour’ s open veins trickle upon us? Who would dare indulge in sin there? Who could do otherwise than devote himself, body, and soul, and spirit, unto God?
Poole: 1Co 6:14 - -- And God hath both raised up the Lord the Lord Jesus Christ, as the first-fruits of those that sleep, from whose resurrection the apostle largely prov...
And God hath both raised up the Lord the Lord Jesus Christ, as the first-fruits of those that sleep, from whose resurrection the apostle largely proveth our resurrection, 1Co 15:1-58 .
And will also raise up us by his own power: God will raise up his saints by his own Almighty power.

Poole: 1Co 6:15 - -- Christ is united to the person of the believer, and he is the Head of the church, which is his mystical body; so that the bodies of believers are in...
Christ is united to the person of the believer, and he is the Head of the church, which is his mystical body; so that the bodies of believers are in a sense the members of Christ, and should be used by us as the members of Christ, which we should not rend from him: but he that doth commit fornication, rends his body from Christ, and maketh it
the member of an harlot for as the man and wife are one flesh by Divine ordination, Gen 2:24 , so the fornicater and the harlot are one flesh by an impure conjunction.

Poole: 1Co 6:16 - -- The conjunction of the husband and wife, mentioned Gen 2:24 , and the conjunction of the fornicator and the harlot, differ not as to the species of ...
The conjunction of the husband and wife, mentioned Gen 2:24 , and the conjunction of the fornicator and the harlot, differ not as to the species of the act, only as to the morality of it; the former is an honest and lawful act, the other a dishonest and filthy act. So that he that is wickedly joined to a harlot, maketh himself one flesh with her with whom he committeth that folly and lewdness, and he must needs by it separate his body from its membership with Christ, whose holiness will admit no such union.

Poole: 1Co 6:17 - -- This phrase joined unto the Lord is thought to be taken out of Deu 10:20 : To him shalt thou cleave. He that hath attained to that mystical union...
This phrase joined unto the Lord is thought to be taken out of Deu 10:20 : To him shalt thou cleave. He that hath attained to that mystical union which is between Christ and every one that is a true believer, is not essentially, but spiritually and mystically, one spirit with Christ; his spirit is united to the Spirit of Christ, and he is one by him in faith and love, and by obedience, Christ and he have one will, and he is ruled and governed by Christ: therefore you must take heed what you do in making your bodies the members of harlots, which they cannot be, and the members of Christ also.

Poole: 1Co 6:18 - -- The apostle cometh to a new argument, by which he presseth them to flee the sin of uncleanness. It is observed by some, that this sin is peculiarly ...
The apostle cometh to a new argument, by which he presseth them to flee the sin of uncleanness. It is observed by some, that this sin is peculiarly to be resisted, not so much by resisting it, and pondering arguments against it, as by flying from it, avoiding all occasions of it, and not suffering our thoughts to feed upon it; but the apostle’ s argument is, because other sins are
without the body that is, the body hath not such a blemish and note or mark of infamy laid upon it by any other sin as by this: in drunkenness the liquor, in gluttony the meat, in other sins something without a man’ s self is that which is abused, but the body itself is the thing which is abused in this filthy sin. So he that is guilty of it,
sinneth not only against his wife, with whom he is one flesh, but against his body which he abuseth in this vile and sinful act, and upon which he imprints a mark of infamy and disgrace, a blot not to be washed out but with the blood of Christ. So as though by other sins men may sin against their own bodies, yet by no sin so eminently as by this sin. Other sins have their seat in the mind and soul; the body, and commonly some particular member of the body, is but the servant of the soul in the execution and committing of them; but lust, though indeed it ariseth from the heart, yet it is committed more in the body than any other sin is.

Poole: 1Co 6:19 - -- The apostle, 1Co 3:16 , had called the church of Corinth,
the temple of God and there made use of it to dissuade them from dissensions and divisio...
The apostle, 1Co 3:16 , had called the church of Corinth,
the temple of God and there made use of it to dissuade them from dissensions and divisions, because by them they defiled and destroyed the temple of God; here he calls the members of that church,
the temple of the Holy Ghost which strongly proveth the Holy Ghost to be God: he mekes use of it here as an argument to dissuade them from the sin of fornication. God’ s temple was built for his habitation upon earth, the place which he chose most to manifest himself in to his people, and for a place wherein his people were to pay him that external homage and worship, which he required of them under the law. So as the apostle’ s calling them the temple of the Holy Ghost, both minded them of the favour God had bestowed on them, and also of that homage and duty which they with their bodies were to pay unto God; the latter they could not perform, nor hope for the former, while they lived in the practice of a sin so contrary to the will of God. Besides, he mindeth them, that their bodies were not their own, they had them of God: they had them from God by creation, and they were upheld by the daily workings of his providence in their upholding and preservation; God had not given them their bodies for this use, the body was not for fornication, as he had told them, 1Co 6:13 . So as in abusing their bodies, they abused what was not their own, nor in their own power to use, as they listed to use them; but to be used only for those ends, and in that manner, that he who had given them had prescribed and directed: and in these abuses there was a kind of sacrilege; as God of old charged the Jews, Eze 16:17-19 , that they had taken the jewels of his gold and his silver, to make images, and commit spiritual whoredom with them; and they had taken his meat, his fine flour, his oil, and incense to set before them, & c.

Poole: 1Co 6:20 - -- For ye are bought with a price what price this is that is here mentioned Peter tells us, both negatively and positively, 1Pe 1:18,19 : Forasmuh as y...
For ye are bought with a price what price this is that is here mentioned Peter tells us, both negatively and positively, 1Pe 1:18,19 : Forasmuh as ye know that ye were not redeemed with corruptible things, as silver and gold, from your vain conversation received by tradition from your fathers; but with the precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot. So he argueth with them against this sin from their redemption, it being suitable to reason, that those who are redeemed out of any slavery or captivity, should be the servants of him who redeemed them, not of those tyrants from whom they are redeemed; such are our lusts and corruptions, from which we are redeemed, as well as from that curse and wrath, which is the consequent of them.
Therefore glorify God in your body, and in your spirit, which are God’ s therefore, (saith the apostle), you who are redeemed with a price, and with such a price, are bound to glorify God, as by speaking well of his name, so by obeying his will, Mat 5:16 . And this you are bound to do, not with your bodies or your spirits only, but in or with your bodies and spirits also, that is, with your whole man; for both of them are God’ s, by a manifold right, not that of creation and providence only, but that of redemption also: with which exhortation the apostle finisheth this discourse, and cometh to give them an answer to some questions about which they had wrote unto him.
PBC -> 1Co 6:20
See Philpot: YE ARE BOUGHT WITH A PRICE
Gill: 1Co 6:14 - -- And God hath both raised up the Lord,.... God the Father has raised up from the dead the Lord Jesus Christ, though not exclusive of the Son, who was e...
And God hath both raised up the Lord,.... God the Father has raised up from the dead the Lord Jesus Christ, though not exclusive of the Son, who was equally concerned in the resurrection of himself, whereby he demonstrated himself to be the Son of God, truly and properly God.
And will also raise up us by his own power; for the resurrection of the dead, whether of Christ, or of his people, is an act of power, of God's own power, even of his almighty power, and is what the power of a mere creature could never effect. Now as Christ, the head, is raised, so shall all his members by the same power; their bodies will be raised powerful, glorious, incorruptible; and spiritual; an argument that they were never made for fornication, nor to be defiled with such uncleanness.

Gill: 1Co 6:15 - -- Know ye not that your bodies are the members, of Christ,.... The whole persons of God's elect were chosen in Christ, and given to him, and made one wi...
Know ye not that your bodies are the members, of Christ,.... The whole persons of God's elect were chosen in Christ, and given to him, and made one with him, their bodies as well as their souls; and both are redeemed by him, and, in union with him, are members of his body, of his flesh, and of his bones:
shall I then take the members of Christ, and make them the members of an harlot? God forbid. Signifying, that it is a most absurd, indecent, abominable, and detestable thing, that the bodies of the saints, which are the members of Christ, should be joined in carnal copulation with an harlot.

Gill: 1Co 6:16 - -- What? know ye not that he which is joined to an harlot,.... Not in marriage, but in carnal copulation, and unclean embraces, is one body with her
f...
What? know ye not that he which is joined to an harlot,.... Not in marriage, but in carnal copulation, and unclean embraces, is one body with her
for two ("saith he", Adam, or Moses, or God, or the Scripture, or as R. Sol. Jarchi says, the Holy Spirit, Gen 2:24)
shall be one flesh; what is originally said of copulation in lawful marriage, in which man and wife, legally coupled together, become one flesh, is applied to the unlawful copulation of a man with an harlot, by which act they also become one body, one flesh; and which is made use of by the apostle, to deter the members of Christ from the commission of this sin, which makes a member of Christ one body and flesh with an harlot, than which nothing is more monstrous and detestable. The apostle here directs to the true sense of the phrase in Genesis, "and they shall be one flesh"; that is, man and wife shall only have carnal knowledge of, and copulation with each other. Some Jewish k writers interpret this phrase,

Gill: 1Co 6:17 - -- He that is joined unto the Lord,.... As every elect person is; his whole person, soul and body, is united to the Lord Jesus Christ, to his whole perso...
He that is joined unto the Lord,.... As every elect person is; his whole person, soul and body, is united to the Lord Jesus Christ, to his whole person, as God-man and Mediator; even as Adam and Eve, whose marriage was a representation of the marriage between Christ and his church, were personally united, and were called by the same name; and as the whole human nature of Christ, consisting of a true body and a reasonable soul, was united to the person of the Son of God; and as appears from the influence that union with Christ has upon the redemption, sanctification, and resurrection of the body. The ground, foundation, and bond of which union is, not the Spirit on Christ's part; for the Spirit being received as a spirit of regeneration, sanctification, &c. is a fruit of union to Christ, and an evidence of it; nor faith on our part, which as a grace is not ours, but the gift of God, and is a fruit of union; nor is it of an uniting nature, but is a grace of communion; and the foundation of all its acts, as seeing Christ, going to him, receiving of him, walking on in him; &c. is a previous union to Christ; but it is the everlasting and unchangeable love of Christ to them, shown in his choice of them, in his covenant with his Father on their behalf, in his engaging for them as a surety, in assuming their nature, and acting, both in time and eternity, as the representative of them, which is the bond and cement of their union, and from which there can be no separation. This union is first discovered in the effectual calling, and will be more manifest hereafter. Now he that is in this sense united to Christ,
is one spirit; for this union is a spiritual one; it is complete and perfect; near and indissoluble; by virtue and in consequence of it, God's chosen ones come to have and enjoy the same spirit in measure, which Christ their head and Mediator has without measure: hence they have the Spirit of God, as a spirit of illumination and conversion, of faith and holiness, of adoption, and as the earnest, pledge, and seal of their future glory. And since so it is, fornication, which makes them one flesh with an harlot, ought studiously to be abstained from.

Gill: 1Co 6:18 - -- Flee fornication,.... As that which is hurtful, scandalous, and unbecoming Christians; avoid it, and all the occasions of it, that may lead unto it, a...
Flee fornication,.... As that which is hurtful, scandalous, and unbecoming Christians; avoid it, and all the occasions of it, that may lead unto it, and be incentives of it:
every sin that a man doth is without the body not but that other sins are committed by the body, and by the members of it as instruments; they are generally committed by the abuse of other things that are without, and do not belong to the body; and so do not bring that hurt unto and reproach upon the body, as fornication does:
but he that committeth fornication, sinneth against his own body; not meaning his wife, which is as his own body; but his proper natural body, which is not only the instrument by which this sin is committed, but the object against which it is committed; and which is defiled and dishonoured by it; and sometimes its strength and health are impaired, and it is filled with nauseous diseases hereby.

Gill: 1Co 6:19 - -- What? know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost,.... What is said in 1Co 3:16 of the saints in general, is here said of their bodies ...
What? know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost,.... What is said in 1Co 3:16 of the saints in general, is here said of their bodies in particular. The Holy Spirit, in regeneration and sanctification, when he begins the good work of grace on a man, takes possession of his whole person, soul and body, and dwells therein as in his temple. So the Jews o call the body of a righteous man
which is in you, which ye have of God; meaning the Holy Spirit which was in them, as in his temple; which dwelt in their hearts, and influenced their bodies, lives, and conversations; and which they received of God as a wonderful instance of his grace and love to them; that he should be bestowed upon them, to regenerate, renew, and sanctify them, to implant every grace, to make them a fit habitation for God, and meet for the inheritance of the saints in light:
and ye are not your own: their own masters, at their own dispose, to live to their own lusts, or the lusts of men; men have not power over their bodies to abuse them at pleasure by fornication, or such like uncleanness, neither single nor married persons; see 1Co 7:4 and of all men, not the saints, who are neither their own nor other men's, nor Satan's, but God's; not only by creation, but by choice and covenant; and Christ's by gift, by purchase, and powerful grace, and in a conjugal relation to him; wherefore fornication ill becomes them.

Gill: 1Co 6:20 - -- For ye are bought with a price,.... Not with gold and silver, but with the precious blood of Christ, as the whole church, and all the elect of God are...
For ye are bought with a price,.... Not with gold and silver, but with the precious blood of Christ, as the whole church, and all the elect of God are. This proves them to be the Lord's, not only his redeemed ones, being ransomed by a price from the bondage of the law, sin, Satan, and the world; but his espoused ones, and which is chiefly designed here; for one way of obtaining and espousing a wife among the Jews was by a price p;
"a woman (they say) is obtained or espoused three ways;
That is, be it ever so small a price, yet if given and taken on the account of espousals, it made them valid; and it was an ancient rite in marriage used among other nations q for husband and wife to buy each other: Christ, indeed, did not purchase his church to be his spouse, but because she was so; but then his purchasing of her with his blood more clearly demonstrated and confirmed his right unto her, as his spouse; he betrothed her to himself in eternity, in the everlasting covenant of grace; but she, with the rest of the individuals of human nature, fell into sin, and so, under the sentence of the law, into the hands of Satan, and the captivity of the world; to redeem her from whence, and by so doing to own and declare her his spouse, and his great love to her, he gave himself a ransom price for her; which lays her under the greatest obligation to preserve an inviolable chastity to him, and to love and honour him.
Therefore glorify God in your body and in your spirit, which are God's; by "God" is here meant more especially the Lord Jesus Christ, by the price of whose blood the bodies and souls of his people are bought, which lays the obligation on them to glorify him in and with both; and contains a very considerable proof of the deity of Christ; who is "glorified", when all the perfections of the divine nature are ascribed to him; when the whole of salvation is attributed to him, and he is looked unto, received, trusted in and depended on as a Saviour, and praise and thanks are given unto him on that account; and when his Gospel is embraced and professed, and walked worthy of, and his ordinances submitted to, and his commandments kept in love to him: and he is to be glorified both in body and spirit; "in body", by an outward attendance on his worship, and a becoming external conversation; by confessing and speaking well of him; by acting for him, laying out and using time, strength, and substance, for his honour and interest; and by patient suffering for his name's sake: "in spirit", which is done when the heart or spirit is given up to him, and is engaged in his service, and when his glory lies near unto it; the reason enforcing all this, is because both are his; not only by creation, but by his Father's gift of both unto him; by his espousal of their whole persons to himself; and by his redemption of both soul and body from destruction: the Vulgate version reads, "bear" or "carry God in your body", and leaves out the next words, "and in your spirit", which are God's; and which also are left out in the Ethiopic and in the Alexandrian copy, and some others.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes


NET Notes: 1Co 6:18 It is debated whether this is a Corinthian slogan. If it is not, then Paul is essentially arguing that there are two types of sin, nonsexual sins whic...

NET Notes: 1Co 6:19 Grk “the ‘in you’ Holy Spirit.” The position of the prepositional phrase ἐν ὑμῖν (en Jumin, &...
Geneva Bible: 1Co 6:15 ( 11 ) Know ye not that your bodies are the members of Christ? shall I then take the members of Christ, and make [them] the members of an harlot? God ...

Geneva Bible: 1Co 6:16 ( 12 ) What? know ye not that he which is joined to an harlot is one body? for ( i ) two, saith he, shall be one flesh.
( 12 ) A proof of the same ar...

Geneva Bible: 1Co 6:18 ( 13 ) Flee fornication. Every sin that a man doeth is without the body; but he that committeth fornication sinneth against his own body.
( 13 ) Anot...

Geneva Bible: 1Co 6:19 ( 14 ) What? know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost [which is] in you, which ye have of God, and ( 15 ) ye are not your own?
( 14...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> 1Co 6:1-20
TSK Synopsis: 1Co 6:1-20 - --1 The Corinthians must not vex their brethren, in going to law with them;6 especially under infidels.9 The unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom o...
MHCC -> 1Co 6:12-20
MHCC: 1Co 6:12-20 - --Some among the Corinthians seem to have been ready to say, All things are lawful for me. This dangerous conceit St. Paul opposes. There is a liberty w...
Matthew Henry -> 1Co 6:12-20
Matthew Henry: 1Co 6:12-20 - -- The twelfth verse and former part of the thirteenth seem to relate to that early dispute among Christians about the distinction of meats, and yet to...
Barclay -> 1Co 6:12-20
Barclay: 1Co 6:12-20 - --In this passage Paul is up against a whole series of problems. It ends with the summons, "Glorify God with your body." This is Paul's battle cry he...
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 6:12-20 - --3. Prostitution in the church 6:12-20
The apostle proceeded to point out the sanctity of the bel...

Constable: 1Co 6:12-14 - --Refutation of the Corinthians' false premises 6:12-14
Paul began by arguing against his recipients' distortion of Christian freedom and their misunder...

Constable: 1Co 6:15-17 - --Arguments against participating in prostitution 6:15-17
Building on the preceding theological base, Paul argued against participating in fornication w...

Constable: 1Co 6:18-20 - --The reason participating in prostitution is wrong 6:18-20
Sexual immorality is wrong, Paul concluded, because it involves sinning against one's body, ...
College -> 1Co 6:1-20
College: 1Co 6:1-20 - --1 CORINTHIANS 6
B. LAWSUITS AMONG BELIEVERS (6:1-11)
1. Settling Disputes in the Church (6:1-8)
1 If any of you has a dispute with another, dare he...

McGarvey: 1Co 6:15 - --Know ye not that your bodies are members of Christ? [parts of his body (1Co 12:27 ; Eph 5:30); branches of the Vine -- Joh 15:5] shall I then take awa...

McGarvey: 1Co 6:16 - --Or know ye not that he that is joined to a harlot is one body? [as if in Satanic marriage] for, The twain, saith he [Gen 2:24 ; Mat 19:5 ; Eph 5:31], ...

McGarvey: 1Co 6:17 - --But he that is joined unto the Lord is one spirit . [Having closest spiritual union with Christ -- Gal 2:20 ; Gal 3:27 ; Col 3:17]

McGarvey: 1Co 6:18 - --Flee fornication . [As Joseph did -- Gen 39:12] Every sin that a man doeth is without the body; but he that committeth fornication sinneth against his...

McGarvey: 1Co 6:19 - --Or know ye not that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit which is in you, which ye have from God? [as the whole church is a temple (1Co 3:16 ; Rom...
