Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of 1 Corinthians 15:46
Howbeit that [was] not first which is spiritual, but that which is natural; and afterward that which is spiritual.
46. Howbeit that was no first which is spiritual ] See note on 1Co 15:23. “The law of God’s universe is progress.” Robertson. His whole lecture on this passage will repay study. He shews how the Fall was an illustration of this law, a necessary consequence of a state of mere natural life; a “step onward,” if for the time “downward.” He traces it in the history of nature and of nations, and finally applies it to individuals, and shews how our natural feelings and affections are the sources of our spiritual ones; how the moral life, the fulfilment, that is, of the law of our being as discerned by natural religion, the living up to the light we have (cf. Rom 2:14), leads up to the spiritual life, and how temptation and sorrow, themselves the fruit of a state of things undeveloped and incomplete, are necessary elements in the formation of the perfect, the spiritual man. Cf. Heb 2:10. Thomas Aquinas remarks how the law holds good in nature, even of one and the same being, that what is imperfect precedes what is perfect.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Howbeit – There is a due order observed, 1Co 15:23. The decaying, the dying, the weak, the corruptible, in the proper order of events, was first. This order was necessary, and this is observed everywhere. It is seen in the grain that dies in the ground, and in the resurrection of man. The imperfect is succeeded by the perfect; the impure by the pure; the vile and degraded by the precious and the glorious. The idea is, that there is a tendency toward perfection, and that God observes the proper order by which that which is most glorious shall be secured. It was not his plan that all things in the beginning should be perfect; but that perfection should be the work of time, and should be secured in an appropriate order of events. The design of Paul in this verse seems to be to vindicate the statement which he had made, by showing that it was in accordance with what was everywhere observed, that the proper order should be maintained. This idea is carried through the following verses.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
1Co 15:46
Howbeit that was not first which is spiritual, but that which is natural.
The natural and the spiritual
I. The natural precedes the spiritual. This is seen in–
1. Nature. Not until the earth was complete did God create man, a spiritual being, in His own image and after His own likeness, etc. Thus man stands at the head of the creation. By his physical organisation, which is natural, he is connected with all that is below him. But by his higher nature, which is spiritual, he is allied with God.
2. History. A nation is well advanced before it exhibits marked spiritual characteristics. Our own ancestors were rude men. Now the Anglo-Saxon race leads the world of thought.
3. The progress of revelation. The Old Testament histories and genealogies prepare the way for Christian doctrine. Bible study proceeds from the natural to the spiritual.
4. The development of religious life. When I was a child I spake as a child, etc. The existence of such a principle suggests the necessity of great consideration for weakness. We then that are strong ought to bear, etc. Weakness may be on the way to strength. Therefore it should be encouraged.
II. The natural conditions the spiritual. The spiritual life must inevitably be affected by the natural life with which it is associated. What a help health is to the spiritual faculties! what a restraint sickness is! As dissipation enfeebles the body, it very soon weakens the mind. How distressing it is to see a really great man like Solomon or Alexander a slave to dissipation! We feel that this is robbery. The spiritual power of such men requires the best assistance of their natural powers. How much has been lost in this way!
III. The spiritual governs the natural.
1. The questions, What shall I eat? What shall I drink? What is the limit of indulgence? are answered here. The natural is for the spiritual, the spiritual governs the natural. That which is truly best for the spiritual must determine the activities of the natural.
2. The more spiritual classes cannot thrive if the less spiritual classes are neglected. The thought and the sympathy of the palace must enter the hut and transform it into a neat cottage. The thought and the sympathy of the hut must go out to the palace, that the helping hand of kindly interest may be grasped. The masses must be instructed. But if the masses need education, then surely they must be willing to be taught. Christianity urges all men to be considerate, the higher to consider the lower, the lower to consider the higher.
IV. The natural is to give way to the spiritual. Not until the spiritual is completely realised does man discover the end of his existence. A tree lives, blossoms, bears fruit, and dies. It has accomplished the purpose of its existence. Not so, however, with man. He just begins to live when he dies. How emphatic are the words of Christ! I am the Resurrection and the Life, etc. I am come that they might have life, etc. (H. M. Booth.)
The true development
I. Natural life necessarily precedes the spiritual, or heavenly.
1. Progression is the law of all life.
2. So man was created in a lower condition with the prospect of advancing to a higher.
3. Natural life, so far from rendering a nobler life doubtful, much rather justifies the hope of it (1Co 15:45-46).
II. The natural and the spiritual life are mysteriously united.
1. Apparently they are distinct, as in the first and second Adam (1Co 15:47-48).
2. But they are really the same nature under different forms (1Co 15:49)
3. Hence when the earthly is lost in the heavenly humanity is still essentially the same.
III. The spiritual life is the glorification of the natural life. Mans destiny is immortality (1Co 15:50). The present mode of life (flesh and blood) is temporary, therefore must the natural be glorified that man may live for ever. (J. Lyth, D.D.)
The natural precedes the spiritual
Many an objector, on hearing the saying of 1Co 15:44, might say, Why should not God create the perfect spiritual life at once? St. Paul in answer applies a general law of the universe to the case before him. It would be contrary to the Divine order in Gods creation, which is first the natural, and afterward the spiritual. Consider–
I. The universality of this law. This is disclosed–
1. In the order of creation. Note the principle of gradation on which the universe arose in Genesis. And this is confirmed at every step by science. First, the formless earth, then the green herb, then the lowest forms of animal existence, then the highest types, then man, the last and noblest. And then, perhaps, an age to come, with a higher and nobler race of beings.
2. In the progress of the Jewish nation. Recollect their origin. They were a nation of slaves. Originally, too, they were of a rude, hard stock, and became in Egypt and in Palestine sensual, idolatrous, and money-loving. You are reminded of one of those trees whose exposed roots are seen gnarled and twisted, hard as iron, more like rock than wood, and yet whose foliage above is rich and noble: below extends the basis of the coarse and natural, above are manifested the beautiful and spiritual. By slow gradations did this nation of slaves rise into a spiritual people.
3. In the progress of the human race. St. Paul says, Adam was of the earth, earthy; and again, he calls him a living soul, that is, a natural man–a man with intelligence, perception, and a moral sense, with power to form a society and to subdue Nature to herself. The fall, then, was a step downwards from innocence, but also it was a giant step in human progress. It made goodness possible: for to know the evil, and to conquer it and choose the good, is far nobler than a state which only consists in our ignorance of both. Until the step of nature has been passed, the step of spirituality cannot be made. Thus did the race begin to share in the spiritual; and among many nations, and by means of many men, was the progress of mankind evolved; but their light was too scattered, and their isolated lives imparted little life. So the next stage in the progress of the race was the coming of Christ, the spiritual Man, whose prerogative it was, not as the first Adam, to live in Eden for Himself, but as the second Adam, to die on Calvary for others; not as the first Adam, to receive happiness, but as the second Adam, to confer life. It was no longer the natural man, but the quickening Spirit, that represented the race to God.
II. This law is true of us as men.
1. Our natural affections precede our spiritual. According to the two great commandments, in the order of importance the love of God is first; in the order of time the love of man. Love to man also begins lower down. We do not love our neighbours first, nor embrace the race in our affection all at once; we ascend from a lower point. The table given on Sinai only specifies one kind of love, but in the fifth commandment they all lie as the furture oak-tree lies in the acorn; the root of all the other developments of love is love and honour unto parents. The child is father to the man. The friend, the husband, the citizen are formed at the domestic hearth. Out of human love grows love to God. For a time the father represents God to the child. He is to train the affections which afterwards shall be given to God; and the brother those which shall expand hereafter for Christ. You cannot force love to God.
2. The moral precedes the spiritual. There is a time when the Adam is formed within us, when the Christ begins to be formed, when we feel within us the sense of Christ in us, the hope of glory, when the living soul, as ruler of the man, gives place to the quickening spirit. But there are two slates through which we pass.
(1) It was through temptation that the first Adam fell from a state of nature. It was through temptation, too, that the second Adam redeemed humanity into a state of grace.
(2) Through sorrow. (F. W. Robertson, M.A.)
The law of the psychical and the spiritual
It is in the history of the individual man that we find our best illustration of St. Pauls law. As babes and sucklings, our life is animal and instinctive, we are a mere complex of appetites–appetite for food, for warmth, for sleep: the mind is dormant. Soon however we begin to take notice, and to respond to notice; to imitate sounds; to pry into the nature of the things around us and their relation to us. Then we learn to name them, to speak about them, to like and dislike them. Intellect awakens; we master our first abstractions; we learn to put words for things. Our schooling commences; perception, imagination, memory, understanding are developed: all the intellectual facets of the soul are polished: and still we carry into this new stage of our life many of the animal and instinctive qualities of the earlier stage. After, and in much blended with, the intellectual comes the passionate era. We rise into that fine frenzy in which we live in another heart, in which we prefer, or fancy we prefer, anothers good to our own. With love comes the long train–desire, envy, jealousy, hatred of rivals, indifference to former affections, ambition to shine and to please. It is the passionate stage of our existence. In and through all these earlier stages there may be the rudiments of spiritual life. We may have formed some conception of God, of His goodness; we may have felt some love, some trust in Him. But, as a rule, the proper life of the spirit is kindred within us, or becomes regnant within us, only after we have passed through the intellectual and passionate stages of our course. The spiritual is not first in us, but the psychical. Nay, however early we may begin to think of God and to love Him, it is obvious that we must have learned to think before we can think of God that we must have learned to love before we can love God. (S. Cox, D.D.)
The two grand types of character
The words show–
I. That man has set before him two moral images or types of character. The earthy and the heavenly. These two are essentially distinct.
1. The one is sensuous, the other spiritual.
(1) The earthy man is material, partially developed–
(a) In his views of happiness. All his pleasures are of a sensuous order.
(b) In his views of wealth, viz:, worldly property.
(c) In his views of dignity, viz., the highest worldly position.
(2) the spiritual man lives behind the visible phenomena, realises the eternal. To him the invisible is the only reality; moral excellence, the only wealth and dignity. Though in the world, he is not of the world. He has citizenship in heaven.
2. The one is practically selfish, the other is benevolent.
(1) The earthy man is controlled by a regard to his own pleasures and aggrandisements. All outside of himself he values only so far as it serves him.
(2) The heavenly man is benevolent. His personal feelings are submerged in the ever-rising seas of sympathy with humanity and God. Like Christ, he pleases not himself.
3. The one is practically atheistic, the other is godly.
(1) The earthy man sees nothing but natural law, order, etc. God is not in all his thoughts. The universe to him is only either an eternal or a self-produced and self-regulating machine, a house that either has never had a builder, or whose builder has deserted it.
(2) The heavenly man sees God in all, like David, and, like Enoch, walks ever with Him.
II. That man does bear the one; he should bear the other. Every man, in the first stages of his life, bears the image of the earthy. This fact is at once the crime and the calamity of the race. But whilst we do bear the one image at first, we should strive to bear the other because–
1. It is right. This heavenly image realises the souls highest ideal of excellence. It is that for which we unconsciously hunger, and for which we shall hunger for ever unless we get it.
2. It is practicable.
(1) We have the model in its more imitable form in Christ. He was pre-eminently spiritual, benevolent, godly; and never was there a character more imitable than Christs–the most admirable, transparent, unchangeable.
(2) We have the means in the most effective forms. The gospel reveals the model, supplies the motives, and pledges the spiritual influences of heaven.
3. It is urgent. To do this is the grand mission of life. Unless the work is fulfilled our existence becomes a failure and a curse. To pass from the earthy to the heavenly is to pass from darkness to light, from sin to holiness, from Satan to God. (D. Thomas, D.D.)
The Divine order
The method of Gods working is upward progress. His path is as the Shining light, etc.
I. In the creation of the material world. First, there was the globe without life; then a world filled with life and beauty. First the protozoans, molluscs, and sponges of the primeval world; after that, man created in the image of God.
II. In the natural development of each individual man.
1. There is helpless infancy. Physical, mental, spiritual forces, and wild passions sleep in that little nebulous mass like thunderstorms in the quiet clouds or summer.
2. By and by we arrive at youth, this blossoming season of our nature, the time of fancy.
3. After that comes manhood. There is now fulness of reason and strength and responsibility.
III. In the dispensations of revealed religion. The law was given by Moses; but grace and truth came by Jesus Christ. Moses was an inspired man: Christ is God manifest in the flesh. Moses was faithful as a servant over all his house–Christ as a Son in His own house, whose house are we; and the grace and truth are more excellent than the law. The law demands obedience, but gives no help to obey; the gospel creates within us new hearts which make obedience a delight. The law revealed sin; the gospel proclaims pardon. The law threatens; the gospel invites. The great promise of the law was, Thou shalt inherit the land; that of the gospel is, I give unto them eternal life, etc. The law was for one nation; the gospel is for the whole world. The law was the shadow; the gospel is the substance. The law was bondage; the gospel is liberty.
IV. In Christian experience and in the development of Christian character.
1. Faith in religion is easy in childhood. Little children fresh from the hand of God are not sceptics. They have the power of reverence and faith. For a time they worship father and mother. They never regard the material universe as a thing to be weighed, and understood, and measured. It is to them a solemn mystery. Being thus constituted, it is the easiest thing in the world to teach a child to utter words of prayer.
2. The young man discovers that much ignorance has mingled with the reverence of childhood, and has not sufficient experience to replace his early fancy with the solid structure of reality and truth. Besides, the powers of childhood become full in youth. Self-will is strong, and the whole republic of the passions is up in arms against the authority of reason and conscience. But Christ is there, and His voice is heard amid the arrogant and noisy voices of the flesh. There is a long struggle. The young man wavers; but, thank God! Christ perseveres, and the Lord, what wilt Thou have me to do? shows that Christ has taken possession of his will.
3. The struggle is not yet over. A time of deep thought and anxious reflection arrives, and brings with it an intense desire to know the reason of faith, the basis of belief. The intellect demands greater evidence than is or can be given. It asks for demonstration. But during this time of intellectual revolt Christ is there; Christ speaks with authority and love, Believe on Me when thou canst not know. Worship before the mystery; what thou knowest not now thou shalt know hereafter. Christ is victorious again, and the pride of the intellect subsides, and the mind bows before Christ, saying, Thou art the power and wisdom of God; and I wish to be Thine for ever and ever.
4. After this comes old age–the best period of all by far. Childhood is untried innocence; youth little better than rebellion against Christ; manhood a struggle against intellectual difficulties and spiritual enemies; but as the years pass on, the mans whole nature is subdued and sanctified. The love of God is shed abroad in his heart. The peace of God, which passeth understanding, keeps his heart and mind in Christ Jesus. Joy unspeakable and full of glory flows in plentifully upon his spirit. By and by visitors from the unseen come and say, in tones never heard before, Brother, come away. What is best in the tree is the last to get perfect.
V. In the increase of the spiritual kingdom in the world. Here we may well ask, Can the gospel live and multiply? Think of China and India, whose very nature is engrained with their false religion and their fantastic philosophy. Can they be changed? But we need not go so far to seek difficulties. Think of the state of things here in England. Think, e.g., of the adoration of wealth and appearances. Can religion live in this dense atmosphere of worldliness? Think again of the unbelief of the age in which we live. There are unhealthy summer days when physical activity is almost an impossibility. A heavy, oppressive, stagnant atmosphere weighs down upon the land. That is a symbol of the spiritual atmosphere of Europe to-day. It is permeated with a spirit of unbelief. I ask again, then, Can Christianity live? Yes.
1. It has lived and increased in spite of the most determined opposition. After eighteen hundred years of trial and opposition, the foundation of God standeth sure. The powers of men and the powers of darkness have exerted themselves to remove this foundation, but it standeth sure, in spite of persecution and in spite of criticism.
2. Christianity has affinities with all good things. Truth, virtue, love, science, philosophy, literature, are good, and the gospel is nearly related to all these. It creates them where they do not already exist; and where they exist, it inspires and promotes them. Nothing good dies. It is falsehood, and not truth; evil, and not good; moral deformity, and not moral beauty, that is going to disappear. The gospel is the grandest truth, the greatest good, the most beautiful revelation ever given to man; and therefore it cannot perish. The word of the Lord endureth for ever.
3. We have the old promise of the Holy Ghost. Goethes last words were, More light! more light! This is the cry of the age. It is not more external evidence that is needed, but more internal illumination, more power of spiritual vision in the minds of men. The light is here in Divine plenitude. Christianity is either supernatural or it is nothing. Christianity makes its way in the world by the coming of the Spirit of God into contact with the spirits of men. Conclusion: The progress is not rapid. But let the Church calm her heart. Let us learn to wait and work. And, above all things, let us not be afraid. He that believeth shall not make haste. Gods method is upward progress, and that upward progress is slow in its development. But the progress is certain, and the end is sure. (T. Jones, D.D.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 46. That was not first which is spiritual] The natural or animal body, described 1Co 15:44, was the first; it was the body with which Adam was created. The spiritual body is the last, and is that with which the soul is to be clothed in the resurrection.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
Christ, the spiritual Adam, was not first in order of time, but the natural Adam, God in his providence rising from more imperfect to more perfect dispensations: and so it is as to Gods providences relating unto us; we have first natural bodies, we are born with such, we grow up and die with such, but then we shall rise again with ohers, in respect of more excellent qualities and endowments.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
46. afterwardAdam had a soulnot necessarily mortal, as it afterwards became by sin, but “aliving soul,” and destined to live for ever, if he hadeaten of the tree of life (Ge 3:22);still his body was but an animal-souled body, not a spiritualbody, such as believers shall have; much less was he a “life-givingspirit,” as Christ. His soul had the germ of the Spirit, ratherthan the fulness of it, such as man shall have when restored “body,soul, and spirit,” by the second Adam (1Th5:23). As the first and lower Adam came before the second andheavenly Adam, so the animal-souled body comes first, and must diebefore it be changed into the spiritual body (that is, that in whichthe Spirit predominates over the animal soul).
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
Howbeit, that was not first which is spiritual,…. As the apostle before proves the distinction of a natural and spiritual body, and gives instances of both in the two principal men in the world, the first and the last; and points out the difference between them, the one being animated, and having life given unto it, the other animating, and giving life to others; proceeds to observe the order of these, how that one was before the other; the spiritual body, though the more perfect and most excellent, yet was not first in being:
but that which is natural; Adam’s animal body was before Christ’s spiritual body:
and afterwards that which is spiritual; yea, even Christ’s animal, or natural body, was before his spiritual one; his body taken from the virgin, and formed in her womb, and in which he lived here on earth, was an animal body, as before observed; and upon his resurrection, it commenced a spiritual one; being the same in substance as the former, only different in qualities; and just so it is, and will be, with the bodies of the saints’; which is the apostle’s design and view, in observing this order; the natural body is first, and then the spiritual; it is first a natural body, as generated and nourished, as weak and dying, and it is afterwards a spiritual one, when raised from the dead.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Howbeit that is not first which is spiritual, but that which is natural (‘ , ). Literally, “But not first the spiritual, but the natural.” This is the law of growth always.
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
Not first – spiritual – natural. A general principle, illustrated everywhere in human history, that the lower life precedes the higher.
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
1) “Howbeit that was not first which is spiritual,” (all’ ou proton to pneumatikon) the spiritual body was not first in order.” Man did not have spiritual pre-existence prior to life conception into a physical, depraved body.
2) “But that which is natural.” (alla to psuchikon) “But the natural (body) was first in order or rank.” The natural body pre-exists the spiritual body and is the tabernacle of the soul from conception, Gen 2:7.
3) “And afterward that which is spiritual.” (epeita to pneumatikon) “After or succeeding (the natural body) came to be the spiritual.” Grace purposed and provided the new body, after, and as a consequence of, the fall and ruin of the first body, Joh 14:1-3; 2Co 5:1-8.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
46. But this is not first, which is spiritual. “It is necessary,” says he, “that before we are restored in Christ, we derive our origin from Adam, and resemble him. Let us, therefore, not wonder, if we begin with the living soul, for as being born precedes in order being born again, so living precedes rising again.”
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(46) Howbeit that was not first which is spiritual.Here a further thought is introduced. There is not only a variety of bodiesand that variety regulated by adaptability to their state of existencebut there is an ordered sequence in that variety. As the Adam was first from whom we derive the natural body and soul, and the Adam was last from whom comes our spiritual nature, so there will be the like order in regard to our bodies. The natural body first in this lifethe spiritual body afterwards in the next life.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
46. Howbeit Notwithstanding that it might be supposed that the greatest would be first, the reverse is the case.
Afterward spiritual God works by progresses and climaxes, bringing out the greatest last. See note on Rom 8:39.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
‘Howbeit that is not first which is spiritual, but that which is natural; then that which is spiritual.’
But there is an order to things. First comes what is of nature ( natural, soulish), where life is imparted to the flesh by God, and then that which is spiritual, with full spiritual life being received from Him Who is Spirit and Who is the life-giver. The one was always to precede the other. Had Adam not sinned he would have progressed from soulish man to spiritual man. But when he sinned the seed died within him. Thus another, a second representative Man, had to come, who could provide that heavenly life which was lost in Adam.
Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett
1Co 15:46 . After it has been stated and confirmed from Scripture in 1Co 15:44-45 that there exists not simply a psychical, but also a spiritual body, it is now further shown that the latter cannot precede the former, but that the reverse must be the case. “ Nevertheless the pneumatic is not first, but the psychical; afterwards the pneumatic .” We are not, with the majority of the older commentators (also Flatt, Osiander, Hofmann), to supply (which the context does not even suggest); but Paul states quite generally the law of development, [84] that the pneumatic appears later than the psychical, a gradation from lower to higher forms, which goes through the whole creation. This general statement he then proves:
[84] See also Ernesti, loc. cit . p. 126.
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
46 Howbeit that was not first which is spiritual, but that which is natural; and afterward that which is spiritual.
Ver. 46. And afterward, that is spiritual ] Nature, art, grace, proceed from less perfect or more perfect. Let us advance forward, and ripen apace, that we “may be accounted worthy to obtain that world and the resurrection from the dead,” Luk 20:35 .
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
46 .] But in the natural order, that which is animal precedes that which is spiritual ( ., ., not , but abstract and general): as in 1Co 15:45 , .
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
1Co 15:46 might have been expressly aimed at the Philonian exegesis; it affirms a development from lower to higher, from the dispensation of to that of , the precise opp [2553] of that extracted from Gen 1:2 by Philo. ( ) “Nay, but not first is the spiritual, but the psychic after that ( : cf. 23) the spiritual”. P. states a general law ( is not to be understood with the adjs.): the as such demands the to follow it (1Co 15:44 ); they succeed in this order, not the reverse. “The Ap. does not share the notion, long regarded as orthodox, that humanity was created in a state of moral and physical perfection. Independently of the Fall, there must have been progress from an inferior state, the psychic, which he posits as man’s point of departure, to a superior state, the spiritual, foreseen and determined as man’s goal from the first” (Gd [2554] ad loc [2555] : see the whole passage).
[2553] opposite, opposition.
[2554] F. Godet’s Commentaire sur la prem. p. aux Corinthiens (Eng. Trans.).
[2555] ad locum , on this passage.
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
Howbeit, &c. Read “But not first the spiritual, but the natural”.
and. Omit.
that which is = the.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
46.] But in the natural order, that which is animal precedes that which is spiritual ( ., ., not , but abstract and general): as in 1Co 15:45, – .
Fuente: The Greek Testament
1Co 15:46. ,) not the first.- , the spiritual) body. This verse refers to 1Co 15:44, 1Co 15:45, making as it were a parenthesis, to which 1Co 15:47 afterwards corresponds.-, afterward) This should be carefully noticed by those, who so dispute about the origin of evil, as if all things should have been not only good at the beginning, as they were, but also such as they will be at their consummation.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
1Co 15:46
1Co 15:46
Howbeit that is not first which is spiritual, but that which is natural; then that which is spiritual.-Adam, as an inhabitant of earth, came before Jesus; so the earthly body comes to all before the spiritual body. [This does not mean perfection in general, but one kind only of perfection, that which has been revealed in Christ as the second head of humanity.]
Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary
that which is natural: Rom 6:6, Eph 4:22-24, Col 3:9, Col 3:10
Reciprocal: 1Co 2:14 – the natural man 2Co 5:1 – our
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
1Co 15:46. The first Adam did not give us a spiritual body, but instead it is one that was made subject to death and decay by being separated from the tree of life. After that came Christ who has the power to give a spiritual body to all His faithful followers.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
1Co 15:46. Howbeit that is not first which is spiritual, but that which is naturalby an ascent from the lower to the higher, as is the law of all Gods works.
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
Vv. 46. Howbeit that is not first which is spiritual, but that which is psychical; and afterward that which is spiritual.
Are we right in regarding this as a general law, or must we, with Osiander and others, understand the substantive , body, and apply the verse exclusively to the particular fact under discussion? The former meaning alone agrees with the ellipsis of the verb, which, if understood, can only be the present. In the latter sense, Paul would have required to use a verb in the aorist (, 1Co 15:45). His object is to justify by a general principle what has taken place in respect of the body: the priority of the psychical to the spiritual body.
The law here enunciated, when rightly understood, throws a vivid light on the general course of God’s work within humanity. The life of the spirit is substantially identical with holiness; it could not therefore have been given immediately to man at the time of his creation; for holiness is not a thing imposed, it is essentially a product of liberty, the freewill offering of the individual. God therefore required to begin with an inferior state, the characteristic of which was simply freedom, the power in man to give or withhold himself. On the choice which he should make between these two alternatives, to keep his natural life or to give it in order to get it back transformed into a higher life, was to depend his fall or progress. In the former case, spiritual life could not be communicated to man; in the latter, it was accorded to him in response to his free and fervent aspiration; and elevation to the perfect state, even for the body, took place in the direct way of progress. But, even in the opposite case, it was not denied to him for ever; for the miseries of sin might, by a long and sad circuit of experience, bring man to exclaim: Oh that Thou wouldest rend the heavens, that Thou wouldest come down! (Isa 64:1). It was to secure the production of this aspiration, the condition of the gift of the Spirit, that during the course of the psychical period, God adopted a people in the midst of whom this need of the economy of the Spirit was intended to be more forcibly developed under the pedagogic influence of the law and the prophets. And when the longing awakened by these two means had reached its full intensity, the answer could at length be granted: the fulness of the times was come; the Son was sent, and the Spirit given (Gal 4:4-6). The apostle does not therefore share the idea, so long regarded as the orthodox view, according to which humanity was created in a state of moral and physical perfection, and fell from that height. He holds, that even independently of the fall there would have been progress from a lower state, the psychical state assigned as a point of departure, to a higher state, the spiritual state foreseen and willed as the end from the beginning. Apart altogether from sin, psychical humanity was called to develop in all directions the manifold powers with which it was endowed, that it might present to the heavenly guest, the Spirit, when He should come to dwell in it, the psychical and bodily organ fitted to display His perfection in the richest and most varied forms, those of art, science, industry, and social life in all its manifestations. The abnormal intervention of sin did not altogether prevent the realization of this Divine thought. In the East, the sense of the Great; in Greece, that of the True and Beautiful; in Rome, that of the Just; in Phenicia, through its commerce and colonies, that of the Useful; in Israel, that of the Holy, served to prepare for the spiritual economy, the new humanity; that Christendom in which we find so many miseries, but in which notwithstanding also the spirit of Pentecost unfolds. Thus, then, with or without the fall, two economies, that of the human soul (normal ancient history) and that of the Divine Spirit (normal modern history): such is the profound law which, from the viewpoint of a free humanity and a healthy Divine preparatory training, must control the history of man. First the psychical, then the pneumatical. This law applies, as Olshausen already remarked, to the course of collective no less than of individual life. What light is shed by this law on true Christian education! Instead of imposing the spiritual state on the child, begin by awakening the need of it, while giving free scope to the expansion of the psychical powers in every direction, which is morally legitimate.
The apostle renders the distinction palpable between the two economies which he has just distinguished, that of the soul and that of the spirit, by contrasting the two heads of both (1Co 15:47); thus he will come to the two races (1Co 15:48), and so return to the two bodies (1Co 15:49).
Fuente: Godet Commentary (Luke, John, Romans and 1 Corinthians)
Howbeit that is not first which is spiritual, but that which is natural; then that which is spiritual.
Fuente: McGarvey and Pendleton Commentaries (New Testament)
15:46 {26} Howbeit that [was] not first which is spiritual, but that which is natural; and afterward that which is spiritual.
(26) Secondly, he wills the order of this twofold state or quality to be observed, that the natural was first, Adam being created of the clay of the earth. And the spiritual follows and came upon it, that is, when the Lord being sent from heaven, endued our flesh, which was prepared and made fit for him, with the fulness of the Godhead.
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
Even though God breathed life into Adam at Creation, that gift constituted Adam a natural person fitted for the present order. The breathing of new life into believers at resurrection, so to speak, will make us spiritual persons fitted for the eschaton. We have the physical body until the eschaton, not before it begins.
Paul may have included this word of clarification to refute the Platonic idea that the ideal precedes the real. Plato taught that the ultimate realities are spiritual, and physical things only represent them. This is probably a view that some in Corinth held. Paul said the physical body precedes the spiritual body, which is the ultimate body.