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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of 1 Corinthians 7:9

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of 1 Corinthians 7:9

But if they cannot contain, let them marry: for it is better to marry than to burn.

But if they cannot contain – If they have not the gift of continence; if they cannot be secure against temptation; if they have not strength of virtue enough to preserve them from the danger of sin, and of bringing reproach and scandal on the church.

It is better – It is to be preferred.

Than to burn – The passion here referred to is often compared to a fire; see Virgil, Aeneas 4:68. It is better to marry, even with all the inconveniences attending the marriage life in a time of distress and persecution in the church 1Co 7:26, than to be the prey of raging, consuming, and exciting passions.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Verse 9. But if they cannot contain] If they find it inconvenient and uncomfortable to continue as widowers and widows, let them remarry.

It is better to marry than to burn.] Bishop Pearce translates the original thus: For it is better to marry than to be made uneasy. , says he, “signifies primarily to burn; but in a metaphorical sense, to be troubled, vexed, or made uneasy. So in 2Co 11:29: Who is offended and I burn not, , and I am not troubled. So in Terence, Uro hominem, is I vex him.” It would be well to soften the sense of this word in reference to the subject of which the apostle speaks. He cannot mean burning with lust, no more than Virgil means so when he says, AEn. iv. ver. 68: Uritur infelix Dido, the unfortunate Dido is tormented; and in Eccl. ii. 68: Me tamen urit amor, love torments me. All this may be said with the strictest truth in such cases where the impure fire referred to above has no existence.

A curious story, which certainly casts light on the phraseology of this place, is related by Dr. Lightfoot, from the tract Kiddushin, fol. 81. “Some captive women were brought to Nehardea, and disposed in the house and the upper room of Rabbi Amram. They took away the ladder [that the women might not get down, but stay there till they were ransomed.] As one of these captives passed by the window, the light of her great beauty shined into the house. Amram [captivated] set up the ladder; and when he was got to the middle of the steps [checked by his conscience] he stopped short, and with a loud voice cried out FIRE! FIRE! in the house of Amram! [This he did that, the neighbours flocking in, he might be obliged to desist from the evil affection which now prevailed in him.] The rabbins ran to him, and [seeing no fire] they said, Thou hast disgraced us. To which he replied: It is better that ye be disgraced in the house of Amram in this world, then that ye be disgraced by me in the world to come. He then adjured that evil affection to go out of him, and it went out as a pillar of FIRE. Amram said: Thou art FIRE, and I am FLESH; yet for all that I have prevailed against thee.” From this story much instruction may be derived.

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

That St. Pauls saying: It is good, & c. did not signify, it is the will of God, or, (as the papists would have it), it is my counsel in order to your further perfection, is plain by his precept for them to marry if they could not contain; and this likewise lets us see that second marriages are not only lawful, but may be an incumbent duty, that is, if they who are concerned as to them cannot contain themselves within the bounds and rule of chastity, which must not only be interpreted with reference to acts of uncleanness. This is contradicted by the reason given by the apostle, determining that marriage was much more eligible than burning, which term signifies the inward fervour and eager inclinations of the mind, not the acts only of the outward man.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

9. if they cannot containthatis, “have not continency.”

burnwith the secretflame of lust, which lays waste the whole inner man. (CompareAUGUSTINE [HolyVirginity]). The dew of God’s grace is needed to stifle theflame, which otherwise would thrust men at last into hell-fire.

Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible

But if they cannot contain, c. Or “if they do not contain”, as the words may be rendered, and as almost all versions do render them if they have not the gift of continency; if they are not willing, and do not think fit to contain, for none are to be compelled; if either therefore they want a will or power to contain, let them marry; it is not only lawful for them to marry, but it is right and best for them; hence it appears that second marriages are lawful, which were condemned by some of the ancients: for it is better to marry than to burn; or be burnt; not with material fire, as Judah ordered Tamar to be brought forth and burnt with, for whoredom; nor with hell fire, the just demerit of uncleanness; but with the fire of lust itself; and so the Syriac version reads it, “it is better to marry than to be burnt” , “with lust”; when persons not only find in them some lustful motions and desires, and a glowing heat of concupiscence; but are as it were all on fire with the lusts of the flesh, and in great danger of being drawn into the commission of fornication, adultery, or other pollutions, and even unnatural lusts; it is much better to enter into a marriage state, though it may have its cares, inconveniences, and difficulties, than to be under temptations and inclinations to such defilements: so the Jews often express the lust of concupiscence by fire; they tell g us a

“story of R. Amram, that he redeemed all the captives, men and women; and the women and the virgins dwelt in a chamber in his house alone; one time, Satan kindled in him, , “the fire of lust”, and he set a ladder to go up to them, and when he came upon the steps of the ladder, he began to cry with a loud voice, , “fire in the house of Amram, fire in the house of Amram”: and the men came to quench the fire, and found nothing burning; for it was only his intention to cause to cease from him the fire of lust; and his thought ceased and his mind grew cool; and they asked him, why he mocked them? he replied, for this is a greater “fire” than all the fires in the world, for it is the fire of hell:”

This story is also told in the Talmud h, with some little variation: so we read of one that is , “inflamed” i, or all on fire “with the corruption of nature”, who does not direct his heart to God: and such a man that finds his corruptions prevail over him, he ought to marry, they say k, as a proper remedy against it:

“he whose mind is intent upon the law continually, and learns it as Ben Azzai, and cleaves to it all his days, and does not marry a wife, there is no iniquity in his hands, and that because his corruption does not prevail over him; but if his corruption prevails over him,

, “he ought to marry a wife”:”

and that for the very reason the apostle here gives. The Ethiopic version reads, “it is better to marry than to commit fornication”; that and adultery both are expressed by fire and burning, with the Jews, as they prove from Ho 7:4 l

g Caphtor, fol. 62. 1. h T. Bab. Kiddushin, fol. 81. 1. i Zohar in Lev. fol. 21. 1. k Maimon. Hilch. Ishot, c. 15. sect. 3. l Vet. Nizzachon, p. 43, 44.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

But if they have not continency ( ). Condition of the first class, assumed as true. Direct middle voice , hold themselves in, control themselves.

Let them marry (). First aorist (ingressive) active imperative. Usual Koine form in for third plural.

Better (). Marriage is better than continued sexual passion. Paul has not said that celibacy is

better than marriage though he has justified it and expressed his own personal preference for it. The metaphorical use of (present middle infinitive) for sexual passion is common enough as also for grief (2Co 11:29).

Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament

Cannot contain [ ] . Rev., have not continence. Only here, and ch. 9 25, of athletes abstaining from sensual indulgences when preparing for the games.

To burn. Continuous present, to burn on : continuance in unsatisfied desire.

Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament

1) But if they can not contain, (ei de) if however, or on the other hand (ouk egkrateuontai) they do not exercise or practice self-control (in matters of sex desires).

2) Let them marry. (gamesatosan) Let them marry – the unmarried men and widows who can not exercise a Christian standard of restraint from fornication. 1Co 9:27; 1Ti 5:14-15.

3) For it is better to marry than to burn. (Kreitton gar estin gamein he purousthai) Because it is better to marry than to be burning or in a state of enflamed impulses of desires for fornication. Joh 2:1-2; Heb 13:4. Our Lord validated sacred matrimony by performing his first miracle at a wedding feast and the writer of Hebrews certified that it was an honorable state for all in which state there was nothing defiling in bed relations.

Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary

9. But if they cannot contain While he advises to abstain from marriage, he always speaks conditionally — if it can be done, if there is ability; but where the infirmity of the flesh does not allow of that liberty, he expressly enjoins marriage as a thing that is not in the least doubtful. For this is said by way of commandment, that no one may look upon it as mere advice. Nor is it merely fornicators that he restrains, but those also who are defiled in the sight of God by inward lust; and assuredly he that cannot contain tempts God, if he neglects the remedy of marriage. This matter requires — not advice, but strict prohibition.

For it is better There is not strictly a comparison here, inasmuch as lawful marriage is honorable in all things, (Heb 13:4,) but, on the other hand, to burn is a thing that is exceedingly wrong. The Apostle, however, has made use of a customary form of expression, though not strictly accurate, as we commonly say: “It is better to renounce this world that we may, along with Christ, enjoy the inheritance of the heavenly kingdom, than to perish miserably in carnal delights.” I mention this, because Jerome constructs upon this passage a childish sophism (396) — that marriage is good, inasmuch as it is not so great an evil as to burn I would say, if it were a matter of sport, that he foolishly amuses himself, but in a matter so weighty and serious, it is an impious scoff, unworthy of a man of judgment. Let it then be understood, that marriage is a good and salutary remedy, because to burn is a most base abomination in the sight of God. We must, however, define what is meant by burning; for many are stung with fleshly desires, who, nevertheless, do not require forthwith to have recourse to marriage. And to retain Paul’s metaphor, it is one thing to burn and another to feel heat. Hence what Paul here calls burning, is not a mere slight feeling, but a boiling with lust, so that you cannot resist. As, however, some flatter themselves in vain, by imagining that they are entirely free from blame, if they do not yield assent to impure desire, observe that there are three successive steps of temptation. For in some cases the assaults of impure desire have so much power that the will is overcome: that is the worst kind of burning, when the heart is inflamed with lust. In some instances, while we are stung with the darts of the flesh, it is in such a manner that we make a stout resistance, and do not allow ourselves to be divested of the true love of chastity, but on the contrary, abhor all base and filthy affections.

Hence all must be admonished, but especially the young, that whenever they are assailed by their fleshly inclinations, they should place the fear of God in opposition to a temptation of this sort, cut off all inlets to unchaste thoughts, entreat the Lord to give them strength to resist, and set themselves with all their might to extinguish the flames of lust. If they succeed in this struggle, let them render thanks unto the Lord, for where shall we find the man who does not experience some molestation from his flesh? but if we bridle its violence, before it has acquired the mastery, it is well. For we do not burn, though we should feel a disagreeable heat — not that there is nothing wrong in that feeling of heat, but acknowledging before the Lord, with humility and sighing, (397) our weakness, we are meanwhile, nevertheless, of good courage. To sum up all, so long as we come off victorious in the conflict, through the Lord’s grace, and Satan’s darts do not make their way within, but are valiantly repelled by us, let us not become weary of the conflict.

There is an intermediate kind of temptation (398) — when a man does not indeed admit impure desire with the full assent of his mind, but at the same time is inflamed with a blind impetuosity, and is harassed in such a manner that he cannot with peace of conscience call upon God. A temptation, then, of such a kind as hinders one from calling upon God in purity, and disturbs peace of conscience, is burning, such as cannot be extinguished except by marriage. We now see, that in deliberating as to this, one must not merely consider whether he can preserve his body free from pollution: the mind also must be looked to, as we shall see in a little.

(396) “ Vn sophisme plus que puerile;” — “A worse than childish sophism.”

(397) “ Auee pleurs et humilite;” — “With tears and humility.”

(398) “ Il y a vne autre espece de tentation moyenne entre les deux que i’ay dites;” — “There is another kind of temptation, intermediate between the two, that I have mentioned.”

Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary

(9) It is better . . .Because to be influenced with unlawful desire is a sin, and to marry is no sin.

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

9. Cannot The cannot is not in the apostle’s Greek. The true rendering is, If they do not be continent if experience shows the certainty of failure.

Burn An ordinary figure, expressing both the intensity and consuming power of lust. Relief from the burning impulse allows the soul, by cultivating the other virtues, to attain as high a piety as celibacy would afford. The very exaggeration of the virtue of celibacy in the post apostolic age of the Church had, no doubt, the good effect of almost recreating the lost virtue of chastity in the Roman empire. It was the restoration of the balance of the virtues, as presented here by Paul, since the Reformation, that has, as it were, brought the family virtues to a lustre of development unknown to former ages.

Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

9 But if they cannot contain, let them marry: for it is better to marry than to burn.

Ver. 9. Let them marry ] There is no lust so hot and violent, but God’s medicines rightly applied will cool and heal. Only remember that it is not the having, but the loving of a wife that keepeth a man chaste and clean. And that God doth use to correct excess and dalliance between married couples, with strong temptations after strange flesh.

Better to marry than burn ] As an oven heated by the baker, Hos 7:4 . As those pagans were scalded, Rom 1:27 , and these papagans a still are, that are forbidden to marry, and yet cannot contain.

a Papist, Popish (with allusion to pagan ). D

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

9. ] but if they are incontinent must be joined not with , which would require , but with the verb. So reff. and Soph. Aj. 1131, , ‘ vetas .’ See other examples in Hartung, Partikellehre, ii. 122 f.

is said by Lobeck, ad Phryn. p. 44, not to be found except in the LXX and N. T. But both Phrynichus and Thom. Mag. say , . See in Wetst.

. ] Lobeck, in Phrynichus, p. 742, says, “post (ut ) invaluit quod non solum in N. T. libris, ut quidam putaverunt, sed etiam in ipsa Grcia reperitur, auctore, ut videtur, Menandro: , nihil impediente pedum modulatione quominus usitato uteretur aoristo.”

] “melius nuberent quam urerentur, id est, quam occulta flamma concupiscentis in ipsa conscientia vastarentur.” Aug [17] de sancta Virginitate, 34, vol. vi. p. 415.

[17] Augustine, Bp. of Hippo , 395 430

Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament

if. App-118.

cannot contain = have not (Greek. ou) self-control. Greek. engkrateuomai. Only here and 1Co 9:25. Compare Act 24:25. Tit 1:8. Occurs in Septuagint Gen 43:31. 1Sa 13:12 (forced).

burn. Greek. puroomai. Elsewhere, 2Co 11:29. Eph 6:16. 2Pe 3:12. Rev 1:15; Rev 3:18.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

9.] but if they are incontinent must be joined not with , which would require , but with the verb. So reff. and Soph. Aj. 1131, , vetas. See other examples in Hartung, Partikellehre, ii. 122 f.

is said by Lobeck, ad Phryn. p. 44, not to be found except in the LXX and N. T. But both Phrynichus and Thom. Mag. say , . See in Wetst.

.] Lobeck, in Phrynichus, p. 742, says, post (ut ) invaluit quod non solum in N. T. libris, ut quidam putaverunt, sed etiam in ipsa Grcia reperitur, auctore, ut videtur, Menandro: , nihil impediente pedum modulatione quominus usitato uteretur aoristo.

] melius nuberent quam urerentur, id est, quam occulta flamma concupiscentis in ipsa conscientia vastarentur. Aug[17] de sancta Virginitate, 34, vol. vi. p. 415.

[17] Augustine, Bp. of Hippo, 395-430

Fuente: The Greek Testament

1Co 7:9. , better) This comparative does not nullify the positive in 1Co 7:38.- , than to be inflamed) A very strong word. A man, who maintains continence, may have that, with which he has to struggle, although he may not be inflamed. Thomas Aquinas on this passage says, to be inflamed [to burn], that is to be overcome by concupiscence; for concupiscence is a certain noxious heat. He, then, who is assailed by it, becomes warm indeed, but he does not burn, unless, overcome by concupiscence, he loses the dew of Gods grace. This burning thrusts men at last into hell-fire.

Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament

1Co 7:9

1Co 7:9

But if they have not continency, let them marry:-If they have not power over themselves to restrain their sexual passions, let them marry.

for it is better to marry than to bum.-It was better to marry even under the distress in which they were living than to burn with lusts [raging, consuming, and exciting] which they were not able to subdue. [The one, though disadvantageous, is innocent, the other is sinful.]

Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary

let: 1Co 7:2, 1Co 7:28, 1Co 7:36, 1Co 7:39, 1Ti 5:11, 1Ti 5:14

Reciprocal: Mat 19:11 – General 2Ti 3:3 – incontinent

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

1Co 7:9. Cannot contain denotes they cannot have complete control over the desires. Burn is from PUROO which Thayer explains at this place to mean, “to be inflamed with sexual desire.”

Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary

Vv. 9. It is a good thing () to remain free from every bond, if one can do so without sinning; but if sin is to be the result, it is better to marry; for sin is an evil, while marriage is not. The compound word includes three ideas: to possess in oneself () the power of () controlling oneself (the middle form). It is the opposite of the of 1Co 7:5.

The aor. imper. , let them marry, has something about it abrupt and dry: Let them marry and have done with it! The aor. in later Greek sometimes takes the place of the primitive aor. , which is found Luk 14:20.

The term , to burn, does not at all apply to the torments of hell, as Tertullian and Pelagius thought. Paul by this word denotes every painful exercise of soul; comp. 2Co 11:29; here: the fire of inward lusts in conflict with conscience. Comp. the of Rom 1:27, not-withstanding the difference of situation.

The fundamental question regarding the formation of the marriage bond is resolved. The apostle now examines the questions relating to the maintenance or breach of this bond. He here encounters two different positions. The first is that of the married who both belong to the Church (1Co 7:10-11); the second, that of the married of whom one only is a Christian (1Co 7:12-16). There follows an appendix relating to some analogous questions (1Co 7:17-24).

Fuente: Godet Commentary (Luke, John, Romans and 1 Corinthians)

But if they have not continency, let them marry: for it is better to marry than to burn. [In contrast with the enforced indulgence of matrimony, Paul sets up his own life of abstinence as preferable, but only to such as have with him a gift of absolute self-control. But all have not this gift, for God’s gifts are infinitely various. He therefore advises the unmarried who have the gift of self-control to remain unmarried, but those lacking it should avoid unlawful lusts by marriage. In short, then, the single state is preferable in troublous times to such as have Paul’s continence. Second question: Is marriage to be dissolved when one party believes, and the other does not? It is likely that this question was raised by the Judaizers, for while the original law given by Moses only forbade marriage with the seven Canaanitish nations (Deu 7:1-3), yet the prophets and rulers so interpreted the law as to make it include Egyptians and Edomites (1Ki 11:1-2; Ezr 9:1-2), and at last it came to be understood that Jews were forbidden to marry outside their own nation (Josephus Ant. VIII. 7:5; XI. 5:4; XI. 7:2; XI. 8:2; XII. 4:6), and the children of such marriages were regarded as illegitimate– Ezr 10:3]

Fuente: McGarvey and Pendleton Commentaries (New Testament)

7:9 But if they cannot contain, let them marry: for it is better to marry than to {g} burn.

(g) So to burn with lust, that either the will yields to the temptation, or else we cannot call upon God with a peaceful conscience.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes

However if a single person cannot or does not control his or her passions, it would be better to marry than to burn with lustful temptation (cf. 1Co 7:2). If a single has very strong sexual urges that may very well drive him or her into fornication, he or she would be wise to get married if possible. Of course a believer should marry a suitable Christian mate. This may be easier said than done, especially for a woman. The Lord has promised to provide the basic needs of those who put Him first in their lives (e.g., Mat 6:33). I believe He will do so in answer to prayer either by providing a suitable mate or by enabling the single person to control his or her sexual passions. In either case, He gives more grace (1Co 10:13).

Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)