Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of 1 Corinthians 3:15
If any man’s work shall be burned, he shall suffer loss: but he himself shall be saved; yet so as by fire.
15. yet so as by fire ] The absolute equality of all in the world to come is no part of St Paul’s system. ‘One star differeth from another star in glory’ (ch. 1Co 15:41). But the history of the Apostle himself is a sufficient evidence that God will not punish with the loss of His presence the man who has acted up to the highest dictates of a conscience not yet fully enlightened. The work perishes, but he who believed himself to be actively serving God when in fact he was doing nothing shall not be driven into the outer darkness. “Sincerity does not verify doctrine, but it saves the man; his person is accepted, though his work perish.” Robertson. Yet he will be saved ‘so as by fire.’ Surely the ‘smell of fire’ may be said to pass on him who sees all those works which he so honestly believed to be for God vanishing as worthless stubble in the searching trial which will ‘purge away all the dross’ of our human doings, and leave only what is of real value in God’s sight.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
If any mans work shall be burned – If it shall not be found to hear the test of the investigation of that Day – as a cottage of wood, hay, and stubble would not bear the application of fire. If his doctrines have not been true; if he has had mistaken views of piety; if he has nourished feelings which he thought were those of religion; and inculcated practices which, however well meant, are not such as the gospel produces; if he has fallen into error of opinion, feeling, practice, however conscientious, yet he shall suffer loss.
He shall suffer loss – :
(1) He shall not be elevated to as high a rank and to as high happiness as he otherwise would. That which he supposed would be regarded as acceptable by the Judge, and rewarded accordingly, shall be stripped away, and shown to be unfounded and false; and in consequence, he shall not obtain those elevated rewards which he anticipated. This, compared with what he expected, may be regarded as a loss.
(2) He shall be injuriously affected by this forever. It shall be a detriment to him to all eternity. The effects shall be felt in all his residence in heaven – not producing misery but attending him with the consciousness that he might have been raised to superior bliss in the eternal abode – The phrase here literally means, he shall be mulcted. The word is a legal term, and means that he shall be fined, that is, he shall suffer detriment.
But he himself shall be saved – The apostle all along has supposed that the true foundation was laid 1Co 3:11, and if that is laid, and the edifice is reared upon that, the person who does it shall be safe. There may be much error, and many false views of religion, and much imperfection, still the man that is building on the true foundation shall be safe. His errors and imperfections shall be removed, and he may occupy a lower place in heaven, but he shall be safe.
Yet so as by fire – hos dia puros. This passage has greatly perplexed commentators; but probably without any good reason. The apostle does not say that Christians will be doomed to the fires of purgatory; nor that they will pass through fire; nor that they will be exposed to pains and punishment at all; but he simply carries out the figure which he commenced, and says that they will be saved, as if the action of fire had been felt on the edifice on which he is speaking. That is, as fire would consume the wood, hay, and stubble, so on the great Day everything that is erroneous and imperfect in Christiana shall be removed, and that which is true and genuine shall be preserved as if it had passed through fire. Their whole character and opinions shall be investigated; and that which is good shall be approved; and that which is false and erroneous be removed.
The idea is not that of a man whose house is burnt over his head and who escapes through the flames, nor that of a man who is subjected to the pains and fires of purgatory; but that of a man who had been spending his time and strength to little purpose; who had built, indeed, on the true foundation, but who had reared so much on it which was unsound, and erroneous, and false, that he himself would be saved with great difficulty, and with the loss of much of that reward which he had expected, as if the fire had passed over him and his works. The simple idea, therefore, is, that that which is genuine and valuable in his doctrines and works, shall be rewarded, and the man shall be saved; that which is not sound and genuine, shall be removed, and he shall suffer loss. Some of the fathers, indeed, admitted that this passage taught that all people would be subjected to the action of fire in the great conflagration with which the world shall close; that the wicked shall be consumed; and that the righteous are to suffer, some more and some less, according to their character. On passages like this, the Roman Catholic doctrine of purgatory is based. But we may observe:
(1) That this passage does not necessarily or naturally give any such idea. The interpretation stated above is the natural interpretation, and one which the passage will not only bear, but which it demands.
(2) If this passage would give any countenance to the absurd and unscriptural idea that the souls of the righteous at the Day of Judgment are to be re-united to their bodies, in order to be subjected to the action of intense heat, to be brought from the abodes of bliss and compelled to undergo the burning fires of the last conflagration, still it would give no countenance to the still more absurd and unscriptural opinion that those fires have been and are still burning; that all souls are to be subjected to them; and that they can be removed only by masses offered for the dead, and by the prayers of the living. The idea of danger and peril is, indeed, in this text; but the idea of personal salvation is retained and conveyed.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
Verse 15. If any man’s work shall be burned, he shall suffer loss] If he have preached the necessity of incorporating the law with the Gospel, or proclaimed as a doctrine of God any thing which did not proceed from heaven, he shall suffer loss-all his time and labour will be found to be uselessly employed and spent. Some refer the loss to the work, not to the man; and understand the passage thus: If any man’s work be burned, IT shall suffer loss-much shall be taken away from it; nothing shall he left but the measure of truth and uprightness which it may have contained.
But he himself shall be saved] If he have sincerely and conscientiously believed what he preached, and yet preached what was wrong, not through malice or opposition to the Gospel, but through mere ignorance, he shall be saved; God in his mercy will pass by his errors; and he shall not suffer punishment because he was mistaken. Yet, as in most erroneous teachings there is generally a portion of wilful and obstinate ignorance, the salvation of such erroneous teachers is very rare; and is expressed here, yet so as by fire, i.e. with great difficulty; a mere escape; a hair’s breadth deliverance; he shall be like a brand plucked out of the fire.
The apostle obviously refers to the case of a man, who, having builded a house, and begun to dwell in it, the house happens to be set on fire, and he has warning of it just in time to escape with his life, losing at the same time his house, his goods, his labour, and almost his own life. So he who, while he holds the doctrine of Christ crucified as the only foundation on which a soul can rest its hopes of salvation, builds at the same time, on that foundation, Antinomianism, or any other erroneous or destructive doctrine, he shall lose all his labour, and his own soul scarcely escape everlasting perdition; nor even this unless sheer ignorance and inveterate prejudice, connected with much sincerity, be found in his case.
The popish writers have applied what is here spoken to the fire of purgatory; and they might with equal propriety have applied it to the discovery of the longitude, the perpetual motion, or the philosopher’s stone; because it speaks just as much of the former as it does of any of the latter. The fire mentioned here is to try the man’s work, not to purify his soul; but the dream of purgatory refers to the purging in another state what left this impure; not the work of the man, but the man himself; but here the fire is said to try the work: ergo, purgatory is not meant even if such a place as purgatory could be proved to exist; which remains yet to be demonstrated.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
But if his work do not abide, if it shall appear upon the more clear and bright shining out of the truth of the gospel, that though he hath held the foundation right, yet he hath built upon it wood, hay, and stubble, mixed fables, and idle stories, and corrupt doctrine with the doctrine of the gospel,
he shall suffer loss by it, either by the afflicting hand of God, or by a loss of his reputation, or some other way. But yet God will not cast off a soul for every such error, if he keeps to the main foundation, Jesus Christ; he shall be saved, though it be as by fire, that is, with difficulty; which certainly is a more natural sense of this text, than those give, who interpret as by fire, of the fire of the gospel, or the fire of purgatory, of which the papists understand it. For:
1. It is, and always hath been, a proverbial form of speech to express a thing obtained by difficulty; we say: It is got out of the fire, &c.
2. For the fire of purgatory, it is a fiction, and mere imaginary thing, and of no further significancy than to make the popes chimney smoke.
3. That pretended fire only purgeth venial sins; this fire trieth every mans work, the gold as well as the stubble.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
15. If . . . be burntif anyteacher’s work consist of such materials as the fire willdestroy [ALFORD].
suffer lossthat is,forfeit the special “reward”; not that he shall losesalvation (which is altogether a free gift, not a “reward”or wages), for he remains still on the foundation (1Co 3:12;2Jn 1:6).
saved; yet so as byfirerather, “so as through fire” (Zec 3:2;Amo 4:11; Jdg 1:23).”Saved, yet not without fire” (Ro2:27) [BENGEL]. As abuilder whose building, not the foundation, is consumed by fire,escapes, but with the loss of his work [ALFORD];as the shipwrecked merchant, though he has lost his merchandise, issaved, though having to pass through the waves [BENGEL];Mal 3:1; Mal 3:2;Mal 4:1, give the key to explainthe imagery. The “Lord suddenly coming to His temple” inflaming “fire,” all the parts of the building which willnot stand that fire will be consumed; the builders will escape withpersonal salvation, but with the loss of their work, through themidst of the conflagration [ALFORD].Again, a distinction is recognized between minor and fundamentaldoctrines (if we regard the superstructure as representing thedoctrines superadded to the elementary essentials); a man mayerr as to the former, and yet be saved, but not so as to the latter(compare Php 3:15).
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
If any man’s work shall be burnt,…. If any minister’s doctrine he has preached shall be destroyed and disappear, shall be disapproved of, and rejected by the churches, not being able, to bear the light and heat of the fire of God’s word:
he shall suffer loss; of all his labour and pains he has been at, in collecting together such trifling, useless, and inconsistent things; and of all that glory and popular applause he might expect from men, on account of them, and which was the snare that drew him into such a way of preaching:
but he himself shall be saved; with an everlasting salvation; not by his ministerial labours, much less by his wood, hay, and stubble, which will be all burnt up; but through his being, notwithstanding all the imperfections of his ministry, upon the foundation Christ:
yet so as by fire; with much difficulty, and will be scarcely saved; see 1Pe 4:17 with great danger, loss, and shame; as a man that is burnt out of house and home, he escapes himself with his own life, but loses all about him: so the Syriac version reads it,
, “as out of the fire”: see Zec 3:2. Or the sense is, that he shall be tried by the fire of the word, and convinced by the light of it of the errors, irregularities, and inconsistencies of his ministry; either in his time of life and health, or on a death bed; and shall have all his wood, hay, and stubble burnt up, for nothing of this kind shall he carry with him in his judgment to heaven; only the gold, silver, and precious stones; and will find that the latter doctrines, and not the former, will only support him in the views of death and eternity.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Shall be burned (). First-class condition again, assumed as true. Second future (late form) passive indicative of , to burn down, old verb. Note perfective use of preposition , shall be burned down. We usually say “burned up,” and that is true also, burned up in smoke.
He shall suffer loss (). First future passive indicative of , old verb from (damage, loss), to suffer loss. In Matt 16:26; Mark 8:36; Luke 9:25 the loss is stated to be the man’s soul () or eternal life. But here there is no such total loss as that. The man’s work () is burned up (sermons, lectures, books, teaching, all dry as dust).
But he himself shall be saved ( ). Eternal salvation, but not by purgatory. His work is burned up completely and hopelessly, but he himself escapes destruction because he is really a saved man a real believer in Christ.
Yet so as through fire ( ). Clearly Paul means with his work burned down (verse 15). It is the tragedy of a fruitless life, of a minister who built so poorly on the true foundation that his work went up in smoke. His sermons were empty froth or windy words without edifying or building power. They left no mark in the lives of the hearers. It is the picture of a wasted life. The one who enters heaven by grace, as we all do who are saved, yet who brings no sheaves with him. There is no garnered grain the result of his labours in the harvest field. There are no souls in heaven as the result of his toil for Christ, no enrichment of character, no growth in grace.
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
Shall suffer loss [] . He shall be mulcted, not punished. See on Mt 16:26; Luk 9:25.
He himself shall be saved. Compare Dante of Constantine : “The next who follows, with the laws and me, Under the good intent that bore bad fruit Became a Greek by ceding to the pastor; Now knoweth he how all the ill deduced From his good action is not harmful to him, Although the world thereby may be destroyed.” ” Paradiso, ” 20 55 – 60.
By fire [ ] . Better, Rev., through fire. He will escape as through the fire that consumes his work, as one does through the flames which destroy his house.
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
1) “If any man’s work shall be burned.” (ei tinos to ergon katakaesetai) “if of anyone the work will be consumed.” Upon the condition that anyone’s work, being of unspiritual, unbiblical nature, will be consumed or burned, how about the soul of the one who started on Christ, the true foundation?
2) “He shall suffer loss.” (Greek zemiotheoetai) “He will suffer loss.” Though the builder will suffer loss for doming up, or tempering his building of life of temporal, unspiritual things, and though he shall suffer loss of rewards at his judgment hour, Paul assures:
3) “But he himself shall be saved.” (autos de sothesetai) “yet he himself shall be saved or delivered” It is great for one to be saved from a fire that destroys his own home. But it is much greater if he can also save his household goods, treasures, endearing possessions of a lifetime. All the saved shall be saved from the fires of hell, but some will be without rewards, saved as if by fire, Mat 10:27.
4) “Yet so as by fire.” (houtos de hos dia puros) “Yet so as through fire.” Blessed is one’s eternal soul security in Christ Jesus. But more blessed is the one who also builds a life on Christ, His Divine attributes of gold, silver, and precious stones of enduring nature, so that his works may also be saved and merit him rewards and a well done at his judgment hour, Mat 25:21.
BARELY SAVED!
One time, Dr. R.E. Neighbour preached a sermon on the possibility of God’s children being saved “so as by fire” and receiving no rewards when they stand before Christ. After the service, the minister walked home with a wealthy businessman who said, “I didn’t like that sermon about the possibility of some Christians barely entering heaven and not receiving any rewards for faithful service. Why, I will be satisfied if I just get inside of heaven and can lean against the walls!” At that moment the two reached the palatial home of the wealthy businessman. It was filled with all the luxuries that money could buy. How different was the wealthy man’s thinking about his heavenly home. Let us aspire to enter glory abundantly and triumphantly. Peter said, “For so an entrance shall be ministered unto you abundantly into the everlasting kingdom of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ” 2Pe 1:11.
-W. B. K.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
15. If any man’s work shall be burned. It is as though he had said: Let no man flatter himself on the ground that, in the opinion of men, he is reckoned among the most eminent master-builders, for as soon as the day breaks in, his whole work must go utterly to nothing, if it is not approved of by the Lord. This, then, is the rule to which every one’s ministry requires to be conformed. Some explain this of doctrine, so that ζημιουσθαι (181) means simply to perish, and then what immediately follows they view as referring to the foundation, because in the Greek θεμελιος (foundation) is in the masculine gender. They do not, however, sufficiently attend to the entire context. For Paul in this passage subjects to trial, not his own doctrine, but that of others. (182) Hence it were out of place to make mention at present of the foundation. He has stated a little before, that every man’s work will be tried by fire. He comes afterwards to state an alternative, which ought not to be extended beyond that general observation. Now it is certain that Paul spoke there simply of the structure which had been erected upon the foundation. He has already in the first clause promised a reward to good master-builders, (183) whose labor shall have been approved of. Hence the contrast in the second clause suits admirably well — that those who have mixed stubble, or wood, or straw, will be disappointed of the commendation which they had expected.
He himself will be saved, etc. It is certain that Paul speaks of those who, while always retaining the foundations, mix hay with gold, stubble with silver, and wood with precious stones — that is, those who build upon Christ, but in consequence of the weakness of the flesh, admit something that is man’s, or through ignorance turn aside to some extent from the strict purity of God’s word. Such were many of the saints, Cyprian, Ambrose, Augustine, and the like. Add to these, if you choose, from those of later times, Gregory and Bernard, and others of that stamp, who, while they had it as their object to build upon Christ, did nevertheless often deviate from the right system of building. Such persons, Paul says, could be saved, but on this condition — if the Lord wiped away their ignorance, and purged them from all dross.
This is the meaning of the clause so as by fire. He means, therefore, to intimate, that he does not take away from them the hope of salvation, provided they willingly submit to the loss of their labor, and are purged by the mercy of God, as gold is refined in the furnace. Farther, although God sometimes purges his own people by afflictions, yet here by the name of fire, I understand the touchstone of the Spirit, by which the Lord corrects and removes the ignorance of his people, by which they were for a time held captive. I am aware, indeed, that, many refer this to the cross, (184) but I am confident that my interpretation will please all that are of sound judgment.
It remains, that we give an answer in passing to the Papists, who endeavor from this passage to prop up Purgatory. “The sinners (185) whom God forgives, pass through the fire, that they may be saved.” Hence they in this way suffer punishment in the presence of God, so as to afford satisfaction to his justice I pass over their endless fictions in reference to the measure of punishment, and the means of redemption from them, but I ask, who they are that pass through the fire? Paul assuredly speaks of ministers alone. “There is the same reason,” they say, “as to all.” It is not for us (186) but for God to judge as to this matter. But even granting them this, how childishly they stumble at the term fire. For to what purpose is this fire, (187) but for burning up the hay and straw, and on the other hand, for proving the gold and silver. Do they mean to say that doctrines are discerned by the fire of their purgatory? Who has ever learned from that, what difference there is between truth and falsehood? Farther, when will that day come that will shine forth so as to discover every one’s work? Did it begin at the beginning of the world, and will it continue without interruption to the end? If the terms stubble, hay, gold, and silver are figurative, as they must necessarily allow, what correspondence will there be between the different clauses, if there is nothing figurative in the term fire? Away, then, with such silly trifles, which carry their absurdity in their forehead, for the Apostle’s true meaning is, I think, sufficiently manifest.
(181) “ Le mot Grec suyuant, qui signifie souffrir perte ou dommage;” — “The Greek word following, which signifies to suffer loss or damage.”
(182) “ Car ce n’est pas sa doctrine, mais celle des autres que Sainct Paul dit, qui viendra a l’examen;” — “For it is not his own doctrine, but that of others, that St. Paul says will come to be tested.”
(183) “ Et fideles ouuriers;” — “And faithful workmen.”
(184) “ Et affliction;” — “And affliction.”
(185) “ Les pecheurs, (disent-ils);” — “The sinners, (say they).”
(186) “ Je respon, que ce n’est pas a nous;” — “I answer, that it is not for us.”
(187) “ Car a quel propos est-il yci parle du feu ?” — “For to what purpose does he speak here of fire?”
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(15) So as.These words remind us that the whole passage, and especially the reference to fire, is to be regarded as metaphorical, and not to be understood in a literal and physical sense. Forgetting this, Roman divines have evolved from these words the doctrine of purgatory.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
15. Suffer loss Like a householder who loses his home. It is true, the parable starts with the man as a builder; but the image becomes more expressive by allowing a change; namely, from a builder to an occupant.
As by fire Like a refugee from his own “house-a-fire;” his home lost, his life scarce saved. This text plainly teaches the doctrine neither of purgatory nor of restorationism. It describes not the purging away by fire the sin or guilt within a man either before the judgment day, as in purgatory, nor after, as in a temporary hell; but the destruction of all false systems by the light of Christ’s final judgment, and the loss of their reward by the inventor of those systems.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
15 If any man’s work shall be burned, he shall suffer loss: but he himself shall be saved; yet so as by fire.
Ver. 15. He shall suffer loss ] Of his work (his laborious loss of time) and of some part of his wages.
Yet so as by fire ] Not of purgatory (a Popish fiction), but of the Holy Ghost. Or (as one interprets it) like unto them who save themselves naked out of the fire without carrying away any of their goods; so his person shall be saved, but he shall not have the reward of a well-qualified minister.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
15. ] if any man’s work shall be burnt up (i.e. consist of such materials as the fire will destroy: Stanley adds, “It is possible that this whole image, as addressed to the Corinthians, may have been suggested, or at least illustrated, by the conflagration of Corinth under Mummius: the stately temples (one of them remaining to this day) left standing amidst the universal crash and destruction of the meaner buildings”), he shall [ suffer loss (literally,) be mulcted . ., scil. , see ref. Matt., and Herod. vii. 39, , , , and Plato, Legg., vi. p. 774, ): but he himself shall be saved (having held, and built on, the true foundation Jesus Christ, he shall not be excluded from that salvation which is the free gift of God to all who believe on Christ, but shall get no especial reward as a faithful and effectual teacher. Cf. 2Jn 1:8 , , , . Meyer remarks, that our Lord hints at such persons under the name of , Mat 20:16 ; Mar 10:31 ), but so, as through fire : i.e. as a builder whose building was consumed would escape with personal safety, but with the loss of his work.
Chrys., Theophyl., c [8] , strangely understand it, that he shall be burnt for ever in the fire of Hell, unconsumed: , , Chrys. , , . , Theophyl. But (1) the fire of Hell is quite alien from the context (see above), and (2) the meaning given to is unexampled, and least of all could be intended where the coming of the Lord is spoken of: cf. inter alia , ch. 1Co 5:5 , . . . . .
[8] cumenius of Tricca in Thrace, Cent y . XI.?
Grot., Elsn., al., explain as a proverb, ‘ tanquam ex incendio ,’ for ‘with difficulty.’ But this is needless here, as the figure itself is that of an ‘incendium:’ and is not ‘ tanquam ,’ but belongs to , see reff.
The whole imagery of the passage will be best understood by carefully keeping in mind the key , which is to be found in the , and the , as connected with the prophecy of Mal 3:4 . There, . (add A) , . , , . . The Lord thus coming to His temple in flaming fire, all the parts of the building which will not stand that fire will be consumed: the builders of them will escape with personal salvation, but with the loss of their work, through the midst of the conflagration.
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
burned = burned up. Greek. katakaio. Compare Mat 3:12. Luk 3:17. 2Pe 3:10.
suffer loss. Greek. zemioo. Elsewhere, Mat 16:26. Mar 8:36. Luk 9:25. 2Co 7:9. Php 1:3, Php 1:8. He will Jose his reward. Compare 2Jn 1:8.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
15.] if any mans work shall be burnt up (i.e. consist of such materials as the fire will destroy: Stanley adds, It is possible that this whole image, as addressed to the Corinthians, may have been suggested, or at least illustrated, by the conflagration of Corinth under Mummius: the stately temples (one of them remaining to this day) left standing amidst the universal crash and destruction of the meaner buildings), he shall [suffer loss (literally,) be mulcted. ., scil. , see ref. Matt., and Herod. vii. 39, , , , and Plato, Legg., vi. p. 774, ): but he himself shall be saved (having held, and built on, the true foundation Jesus Christ, he shall not be excluded from that salvation which is the free gift of God to all who believe on Christ, but shall get no especial reward as a faithful and effectual teacher. Cf. 2Jn 1:8, , , . Meyer remarks, that our Lord hints at such persons under the name of , Mat 20:16; Mar 10:31), but so, as through fire:-i.e. as a builder whose building was consumed would escape with personal safety, but with the loss of his work.
Chrys., Theophyl., c[8], strangely understand it, that he shall be burnt for ever in the fire of Hell, unconsumed: , , Chrys. , , . , Theophyl. But (1) the fire of Hell is quite alien from the context (see above),-and (2) the meaning given to is unexampled,-and least of all could be intended where the coming of the Lord is spoken of: cf. inter alia, ch. 1Co 5:5, … . .
[8] cumenius of Tricca in Thrace, Centy. XI.?
Grot., Elsn., al., explain as a proverb, tanquam ex incendio, for with difficulty. But this is needless here, as the figure itself is that of an incendium: and is not tanquam, but belongs to , see reff.
The whole imagery of the passage will be best understood by carefully keeping in mind the key, which is to be found in the , and the , as connected with the prophecy of Malachi 3, 4. There, . (add A) , . , , . . The Lord thus coming to His temple in flaming fire, all the parts of the building which will not stand that fire will be consumed: the builders of them will escape with personal salvation, but with the loss of their work, through the midst of the conflagration.
Fuente: The Greek Testament
1Co 3:15. , he shall suffer loss) He shall fail in obtaining the reward, not in obtaining salvation.-) he himself.-, shall be saved) because he does not forsake this foundation, 1Co 3:12.-, as) a particle of explanation and limitation; as one who should be obliged to go through fire.-, through) So , through [= with], Rom 2:27 : not without fire, comp. 1Co 3:13. As the shipwrecked merchant, though he has lost his merchandise and his gain, is saved through the waves.[28]
[28] Is saved, though having to pass through the waves.-ED.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
1Co 3:15
1Co 3:15
If any mans work shall be burned, he shall suffer loss: but he himself shall be saved; yet so as through fire.-When this test by fire is made has been a question of some doubt. It seems to be that if one brings in ill-prepared material, it will be destroyed. Paul says of his converts: Ye are our epistle, written in our hearts, known and read of all men; (2Co 3:2), and For what is our hope, or joy, or crown of glorying? Are not even ye, before our Lord Jesus at his coming? For ye are our glory and our joy. (1Th 2:19-20). If these converts were to be the ground of his reward, the loss of them would cause him to suffer a corresponding loss, yet he would be saved, but the fire that destroyed his bad work would test him. This teaching of Paul was clearly intended to warn the church he had planted and taught and among whom he had determined to know nothing but Jesus Christ, and him crucified, against teachers who would come into their midst and teach the commandments of men, that would corrupt and defile the temple of God.
Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary
saved
(See Scofield “Rom 1:16”)
Fuente: Scofield Reference Bible Notes
work: 1Co 3:12, 1Co 3:13, Rev 3:18
he shall: Act 27:21, Act 27:44, 2Jo 1:8
yet: Amo 4:11, Zec 3:2, 1Pe 4:18, Jud 1:23
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Verse 15. If a man’s “converts” fail to stand the test of persecutions or the self-denials required, he will lose this reward described in the preceding verse. But if he has not shunned to declare all the counsel of God, he will be saved from the fire of God’s wrath that is to come upon the unfaithful. In other words, a preacher’s salvation does not depend upon the steadfastness of those whom he brings to Christ, but on his own faithfulness in preaching and living the truth.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
1Co 3:15. If any mans work shall be burnedas consisting of the inflammable wood, hay, stubble,
he shall suffer lossloss of his time, his pains, his hopes, his credit; his whole ministry, even though right at bottom, yet all of it which is of this character, disappearing.
but he himself shall be saveda statement of vast importance, as showing that the apostle is not speaking here of false teachers, but of the true servants of Christ.
yet so as by fireas of one who escapes from the fire by a rush, or is plucked out of it, his naked person alone saved.
Note.That the Church of Rome should deem such a passage any justification of their dogma of a purgatorial fire in the intermediate state is strange. For everything said of the fire here would seem to preclude any such interpretation.
(1) This fire is to try every mans work; but no Romanist believes that of the purgatorial fire.
(2) The purgatorial fire precedes the judgment, being designed to prepare the imperfectly sanctified to abide it, whereas this fire is the judgment itself
(3) Those here spoken of are saved in the judgment, so ashy fire,not by means of the fire, but simply with difficulty; whereas the Romish doctrine is that a purifying process by means of fire will have to be gone through to fit those in it for heavena totally different idea.
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
Vv. 15. To understand the picture which the apostle draws of the opposite result, we must undoubtedly suppose the workmen occupying the portion of the building which has been committed to them, and to which they are putting the last touch. In proportion as the fire, set to the building, consumes the combustible materials of which the bad workman has made use, the latter of course finds himself in danger of perishing along with his work; if he is saved, it can only be by escaping through the flames, and thanks to the solidity of the foundation.
The second future , shall be burned, is an ancient form (Homer, Hesiod) which had been replaced by the first future , and which reappears in the later Greek writers. By the perishable work of this labourer, Paul understands the Christian life without seriousness, humility, self-denial, personal communion with Christ, which has been produced among the members of the Church by the ministry of a preacher solely concerned to move sensibility, to charm the mind and please his audience.
The loss, , with which he is threatened, consists above all in the proved uselessness of his labour and in its destruction, which will take place under his own eyes. With what pain will he contemplate the merely external fruits of his brilliant or profound preaching passing away in smoke! Then he will see himself refused the reward of the faithful servant, the honourable position in Christ’s kingdom, to which he imagined himself entitled: the payment of his cheque will be refused him.
But the apostle adds that this worker shall be saved. Chrysostom and the old Greek commentators understood the word save here in the sense of keep: kept in Gehenna to suffer for ever. But the pronoun establishes an evident contrast between the reward lost and the person saved; then the verb , to save, is always taken in a favourable sense; Paul would have required to say in the sense indicated , shall be kept; finally, the , through fire, is not identical with , in fire. The apostle certainly means, that though this workman has put bad materials into the building, yet because he built on the foundation he will not be given over to condemnation. But if he reaches salvation, it will only be through the furnace, like one who is obliged, in order to save his life, to pass through the flames. This furnace comprehends all the terrors of this judgment: the shame of this revelation, the horror caused by the look of the offended Judge, the grief of seeing the work on which he congratulated himself reduced to nothingness, and the souls whom he thought he had built up incapable of undergoing the last trial, and lost partly through his fault…! I have searched myself and I have found myself, said a dying pastor; this is all the punishment God reserves for me. Were not these the first kindlings of the fire of which the apostle here speaks?
Some Catholic commentators have thought to find in the words, as through fire, a proof in favour of the doctrine of purgatory, and the Council of Florence, in 1439, based the dogma on this passage (Edwards). This is to forget,1. that the fire is allegorical like the building; 2. that it is only teachers who are in question; 3. that the trial indicated is a means of valuation, not of purification; 4. that this fire is lighted at Christ’s coming, and consequently does not yet burn in the interval between the death of Christians and that advent; 5. that the salvation of the worker, of which Paul speaks, takes place not by, but in spite of the fire.
There is something more serious than to build badly, and that is to do violence to what is already built. Such is the relation between the following passage, 1Co 3:16-20, and the preceding. Hofmann well states this transition: Paul passes from those who took upon them, without serious reflection, to continue his work at Corinth, to those who did not fear to destroy the fruit of his labour. Only it need not be said: of his labour; for he has not given himself out as one of the , of those who have raised the building on the foundation laid. We must therefore speak of the work done, and successfully done, after Paul’s ministry. To whom are we to ascribe such labour if not to Apollos, who had watered what the apostle had planted? As, then, it was impossible to apply to this teacher the figure of the bad workman in the previous picture, it is still more impossible to apply to him the figure of the destroyers in the following representation. And since the labour of demolition, about to be spoken of, is attributed to that same human wisdom spoken of in chap. 1, we find the opinion confirmed which we had expressed in explaining the chapter, viz. that it had no reference whatever to the ministry of Apollos.
Fuente: Godet Commentary (Luke, John, Romans and 1 Corinthians)
If any man’s work shall be burned, he shall suffer loss [if a teacher’s disciples endure the test of judgment, he shall receive a reward, of which his converts will be at least a part (1Th 2:19; Phi 2:16); but if his disciples do not stand that test, he shall of course lose whatever property he had in them, and perhaps more– 2 John 1:8]: but he himself shall be saved; yet so as through fire. [The teacher may of course be saved independently of his disciples, for salvation is a gift and not a reward; but he will be saved as a steward who has lost the things of his stewardship; as a tenant who has had his harvest burned, or as a contractor whose structure has gone up in flames: see 1Co 3:9]
Fuente: McGarvey and Pendleton Commentaries (New Testament)
15. If the work of any one shall be burnt up, he shall suffer loss, but he himself shall be saved, but truly as through fire. Here you see the case is clear and lucid: this man whose foundation is all right, for the Holy Ghost laid it, has been truly regenerated, and has as good a foundation as his neighbor who builds on his foundation a fire-proof superstructure. But, unfortunately, this man builds on his foundation a house out of wood, hay and stubble, which he is bound to lose when fiery trials come. Now, it says he shall lose his house it shall be utterly consumed, which is the meaning of the Greek, much stronger than E.V. But he himself shall be saved through the fire; i. e., he shall go to Heaven, but go through the fire, which will burn his house and everything he possesses, so that he will barely escape by the skin of his teeth, leaping out of a second-story window and running away for his life. So we find both of these vividly contrasted characters get to Heaven, the one rich in gold, silver and precious stones, and the other utterly impoverished, but merely squeezing in through the pearly gates, entering Heaven in spiritual infancy, where he must begin de novo to build his heavenly superstructure, which shall continue, tower and brighten through all eternity. Now, who is this man? He is no apostate, for in that case he would have lost his foundation, i. e., his regeneration. Rest assured, he is the man who, having been truly converted, blessedly born from above, has failed to go on to perfection. He has not been idle: he has built a great mansion, but, unfortunately, made it out of wood, hay and stubble; i. e., instead of going for holiness to the Lord, bottom-rock sanctification, the baptism of the Holy Ghost and fire, Christ crowned within, the fullness of the Spirit and the gifts of the Spirit, he said, like a noted religious editor recently: The conversion God gave me in an old log school-house out in the country, when a boy, is good enough for me; I am satisfied with it. This man is none of your deadheads, as you see he builds a great house. I know he becomes very active in the church, builds fine edifices, is a successful financier, looking after all the (human) institutions of the church. They make him a doctor of divinity, and send him to the general conference. Truly he is no ordinary man. He is beloved and honored by thousands, a popular and acceptable pastor, his Christian and ministerial character is irreproachable. He is Heaven-bound. Justification is a title-deed to Heaven, and holiness before we get there as a necessary qualification. So this good man comes to lifes end. He has not fought holiness, and backslidden in that way, but simply neglected it, holding fast his justification and thinking that it is enough. Here he has a title-deed to Heaven; but he can not go without entire sanctification. Therefore, like all genuine Christians who reach lifes end, and like all infants, he must receive it as the old theologians all tell us, in articulo mortis, i. e., in the article of death. The fires of the Holy Ghost coming on him, to sanctify him for Heaven, burn up his life-work, which was simply ecclesiastical, socialistic and philanthropic, in its very nature only appertaining to this world, and utterly heterogeneous to the heavenly state. Consequently he loses his life-work, because it will not do for Heaven, but himself, through the fires of the Holy Ghost in a death-bed sanctification, makes his way into Heaven, entering glory in spiritual infancy much as if he had died when a boy, soon after he was converted. Hence you see he has lost the opportunities of this life in the grand curriculum of heavenly holiness and perennial glory which shall constitute the employment and fruition of the saints through all eternity. Quite different was the case of his comrade who got converted at the same altar, but went for radical holiness and entire sanctification with all his might, the theme of his ministry and the battle-cry of his life being Holiness to the Lord. Consequently he built upon his foundation a holy experience, and spent his life in the straight line of holiness, making the salvation of sinners and the sanctification of believers his constant theme and lifework. Therefore he actually entered the heavenly state when he got sanctified wholly, and spent his whole life building a heavenly superstructure made out of heavenly materials, fire-proof, water- proof and time-proof. Consequently, when he rises from the battlefield to the mount of victory, the work of his whole life goes with him; is fully recognized in Heaven, valid and satisfactory, and becomes the glorious substratum of the heavenly superstructure which all the saints in glory build on through all eternity, ever towering and brightening, the admiration of angels and archangels, and the song of cherubim and seraphim, while the cycles of eternity speed their flight.
Ye are Gods Temple.
Fuente: William Godbey’s Commentary on the New Testament
Verse 15
Yet so as by fire; with difficulty,–as one escapes from a burning building.
Fuente: Abbott’s Illustrated New Testament
3:15 If any man’s work shall be burned, he shall suffer loss: but {8} he himself shall be saved; yet so as by fire.
(8) He does not take away the hope of salvation from the unskilful and foolish builders, who hold fast the foundation, of which sort were those rhetoricians, rather than the pastors of Corinth. However, he adds an exception, that they must nonetheless suffer this trial of their work, and also abide the loss of their vain labours.