1 Corinthians3
Carnality and Immaturity in the Church
Ministers are God's Fellow Workers
Building on the Foundation of Christ
The Community is God's Temple
True Wisdom and Divine Ownership
Study Notes for 1 Corinthians 3
Verse 1
Paul contrasts the 'spiritual' Christian (one guided by the Spirit) with the 'carnal' or 'fleshly' Christian (one still dominated by fallen human nature), identifying the Corinthians as the latter.
Verse 2
The metaphor of 'milk' represents simple, foundational teachings, while 'meat' represents deeper theological or ethical truths. Their inability to handle 'meat' shows their spiritual immaturity.
Verse 3
The practical evidence of their carnality is factionalism ('envying, and strife, and divisions'), which mimics the behavior of the non-believing world ('walk as men').
Verse 5
Paul minimizes the roles of himself and Apollos, emphasizing that they are merely 'ministers' (servants) used by God to facilitate belief.
Verse 6
Using the agricultural metaphor, Paul 'planted' (founded the church), Apollos 'watered' (nurtured the converts), but the growth and results belong solely to God.
Verse 8
The workers are 'one' in purpose and service, yet each will be judged individually and rewarded for the quality and faithfulness of their own labor.
Verse 9
The church is described using two key metaphors: 'God’s husbandry' (a field being cultivated) and 'God’s building' (a structure under construction), highlighting divine ownership and purpose.
Verse 10
Paul identifies himself as a 'wise masterbuilder' (*architekton*), indicating his role in laying the essential foundation of the Gospel in Corinth. Subsequent teachers must be careful how they build upon it.
Verse 11
Jesus Christ is the non-negotiable, singular foundation for the church and all Christian teaching. No genuine spiritual work can be built on any other basis.
Verse 12
These materials represent the quality of ministry, teaching, or works: gold, silver, and precious stones represent enduring, godly work; wood, hay, and stubble represent worthless, superficial, or self-centered work.
Verse 13
The 'day' refers to the future judgment (often understood as the Bema Seat judgment for believers), where the quality of every person’s work will be tested by the purifying 'fire' of God's scrutiny.
Verse 15
The individual whose work fails the test will 'suffer loss' (of reward), but their salvation remains secure, emphasizing the distinction between eternal life and rewards for service.
Verse 16
Paul shifts the metaphor: the collective body of Corinthian believers (plural 'ye') is the holy dwelling place (*naos*) of God’s Spirit, replacing the physical temple in Jerusalem.
Verse 17
This is a severe warning against those who introduce destructive teaching or cause division, thereby 'defiling' or ruining the corporate temple (the church).
Verse 18
Paul returns to the theme of worldly wisdom (2:6), urging believers to reject human intellectual arrogance and embrace the 'foolishness' of the gospel in order to gain true divine wisdom.
Verse 19
Paul quotes Job 5:13 to demonstrate that God actively frustrates the schemes and cleverness of those who rely on their own earthly wisdom.
Verse 21
The conclusion to the factional argument: since all things ultimately belong to the believer through Christ, they have no reason to boast or 'glory' in temporary human leaders.
Verse 22
This radical list affirms the believer's comprehensive ownership of reality—including leaders, the physical world, and even the events of life and death—as a result of their union with Christ.
Verse 23
This verse establishes the ultimate theological hierarchy: everything belongs to the believer, but the believer belongs to Christ, and Christ belongs to God.