Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of 1 Corinthians 6:19
What? know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost [which is] in you, which ye have of God, and ye are not your own?
19. know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost ] See note on ch. 1Co 3:16, and cf. 2Co 6:16; Eph 2:21-22 ; 1Ti 3:15; 2Ti 2:20; Heb 3:3; 1Pe 2:5. Observe also that God in Christ acts through the Spirit (cf. 1Co 6:11; 1Co 6:15 of this chapter), so that ‘we are the temple of God’ because ‘the Spirit of God dwelleth in us.’ Nothing can be more effectual than the thought of such an inhabitation, as being the result of our Christian calling, to restrain us from the sin here mentioned.
which ye have of God ] Rather, whom ye have from God, referring to the Holy Spirit. Cf. St Joh 3:5; Joh 14:26; Joh 15:26; Act 2:33. For the use of “which” for “whom,” cf. ‘Our Father which art. in heaven,’ and Tit 3:6.
ye are not your own ] Cf. ch. 1Co 7:22; Rom 6:18; Rom 6:22; St Joh 8:30; also Rom 14:8. The Scriptures frequently remind us that we have passed from slavery to sin into slavery to Christ, the latter slavery, however, being the true freedom of man, enabling him to fulfil the law of his being.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
What! know ye not … – This is the fifth argument against this sin. The Holy Spirit dwells in us; our bodies are his temples; and they should not be defiled and polluted by sin; see the note at 1Co 3:16-17. As this Spirit is in us, and as it is given us by God, we ought not to dishonor the gift and the giver by pollution and vice.
And ye are not your own – This is the sixth argument which Paul uses. We are purchased; we belong to God; we are his by redemption; by a precious price paid; and we are bound, therefore, to devote ourselves, body, soul, and spirit, as he directs, to the glory of his name, not to the gratification of the flesh; see the note at Rom 14:7-8.
Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible
1Co 6:19-20
What?
Know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost?
The dignity and service of the body
I. The dignity of the body. The apostle speaks in the accents of surprise, as if to imply that they ought to know.
1. Many considerations may commend the sanctification of the flesh to God, e.g.
(1) The natural care for our bodies.
(2) The possibility that the angels may have bodies resembling our own, since every angelic appearance in Scripture has been in human shape.
(3) The fact that Christ ascended to heaven in a body of flesh and bones.
(4) The fact that the flesh is included in His redeeming work so that in heaven there will be glory and happiness for the body.
2. But the apostle takes higher ground. The body of a Christian man is claimed and taken possession of by the God who has redeemed it–and therefore to be treated with the same respect with which a heathen would regard the temple of his idol, or a Jew the holy of holies.
3. Of course this is not true of all men. It is true that the body is fearfully and wonderfully made in all, that there dwells within it an immortal soul full of noble gifts, that body and soul are actuated by a supernatural power. But in natural men that power is the power of Gods enemy. It is to Christians alone that the text applies.
4. Now the idea of temple implies–
(1) Presence. In the temples of idolatry there was a visible shape to represent the spirit supposed to be there. In the Temple at Jerusalem there was indeed no figure, but there the visible Shekinah dwelt above the mercy-seat. Thus if the body be the temple of the Holy Ghost it must be because He is actually there. What a solemn thought that is!
(2) Presence, not by permission, but by right. Thus it is not that we ought from reverence or courtesy to render to God the use of a body which is our own, but it is that God assumes the use of a body which is His–bought with a price. We were Gods by creation, and the right of property thus derived still exists. But we have given to Satan what is really Gods; and the Spirit of God will not come back into a body where Satans seat is, nor by force take the flesh, while the affections are bestowed elsewhere. But when His grace has won the heart back again, then God comes back to His own and takes full possession of the entire man. Try to realise the force of motive which this fact supplies for holiness.
II. The service of the body. The Christian who thus thinks of his flesh as the temple of God cannot fail to acquire a higher respect for it, and it is evident that this higher respect will show itself in small things as well as in great. Follow the drunkard or the profligate, who abuse their natural health by sin, and see if the result be not neglect of the body, and misery and suffering in the very flesh they pamper. But let the grace of God change that mans heart, and what a difference is seen! Now he holds his head erect and takes his place among his fellow-men.
1. We should jealously watch our bodies lest they be polluted with sin.
2. Respect for the body, as the temple of the Holy Ghost, should teach propriety of dress and manner, and even of bodily appearance. A saved body, destined for heaven, is neither to be neglected nor to be made into an idle gewgaw, but is to be treated with the serious propriety which becomes a house of God and the God who fills it.
3. We need to watch over all our habits, so as to keep the body in the fittest state possible to do Gods will. This is the highest object of health, that the members may be instruments of righteousness unto holiness.
4. Learn the due use and place of the body in our worship of God. The real seat of worship is in the heart, but when the heart is right, the body must share the service. Hence arises the propriety of outward forms of worship, of the bended knees, &c. (Canon Garbett.)
The temple of the Holy Ghost
1. There is a great danger in religion–as there is in everything else–of a want of proportion. To the natural man the body is much more than the soul. He can see his body; his soul is a matter of faith. The body can give him immediate pleasure; the pleasures of the soul lie chiefly in the future. To the care of the body there is little or nothing to oppose itself; to the care of the soul, the opposition, both from within and without, is very strong. Hence, to provide for that body takes by far the greatest part of a mans life. When a man becomes religious these two things change places. The body goes into the shade; the soul is everything. The body is a thing to mortify. In all this because it is extravagant there is a danger that there will follow a reaction, and the body may become again too important, because it was made too insignificant.
2. Now let us see how Gods truth regards the body. The whole man is a temple; the body its walls; the senses its gates; the mind the nave; the heart the altar-piece; and the soul the holy of holies. And yet, as in common life, we call the walls and the doors the house, so the body is called the temple, so important, so sacred is the body.
3. Christ wore a body and wears it for ever. His discourses were very often about the body, and His miracles were chiefly upon the body. The body finds a place in our daily prayer–Give me this day my daily bread.
4. We also know the close connection between the body and the mind! how the state of the one affects the condition of the other; and how the body reflects the inner life of the man. What are features, however delicately formed, without expression? And what makes the expression but thoughts–love, tenderness, sympathy l Or, equally, on the other side, sin lowers, vulgarises, spoils, even distorts the countenance. The real beauty of the temple after all is its consecration.
5. And when you are dealing with some fellow-creature, what a new character the whole transaction would assume–if you would recognise the fact that that person is a temple. However poor, wretched, weak, wicked. Notwithstanding, the Holy Ghost may be in that man–working, striving. (J. Vaughan, M. A.)
The temple of the Holy Ghost
1. God does not influence us merely from the outside–play upon us as the flame flickers on the bar of the grate, but rather as the heat penetrates into the very heart and core of the iron. He enters the very centre of our being, and makes His influence felt throughout the whole.
2. This indwelling is not merely that natural indwelling which is a necessary attribute of an Infinite Being; it is gracious friendly indwelling (Isa 57:15; Joh 14:23). The apostle employs this figure–
I. To quicken our abhorrence of sensual vice. Nowhere are disorder and neglect more unseemly than in a temple; but of all kinds of disorder and neglect the most repulsive is filth. For a Christian to indulge in sensuality is to commit an abomination to be classed with the sacrilege of Antiochus Epiphanes, who offered a sow on the altar of the Temple.
II. To give an impulse to our desires for greater purity of heart and higher spiritual attainments–for those especially which imprint themselves on, and give elevation to, the bodily features. Not only should the sensual look, the bloated complexion excite our loathing: we should seek for such a state of soul as shall give a pleasing countenance. Cathedral builders used to spend much time and pains on the doorway, so as to make it worthy of the building. The face is the doorway to the soul, and it becomes us to see that it does not discredit the temple. Christian men and women should feel that the dreary look of care, the peevishness of discontent, &c., do not befit those whose bodies are the temples of the Holy Ghost.
III. To stimulate us to render God His due. The temple is a place of worship. Net that we can of ourselves provide offerings worthy of God; we must ask Him to give us of His own wherewith to serve Him. But if He dwells in us He will inspire with the feelings and produce in us the fruits that constitute the most acceptable offerings. His presence is not like that of a star in the firmament which, bright though it be, communicates nothing of itself to our distant planet. It is rather like the presence of the sun, which cannot shine without brightening earth and sky and sea; without giving its colour to the rose, its fragrance to the lily, its flavour to the peach; without ripening the golden grain and cheering and brightening the hearts of men. God cannot dwell in the soul without corresponding influences; without fostering love and purity; without making sin more odious and holiness more attractive; without giving it strength to banish the one and to follow the other. Conclusion: The Holy Spirit may be resisted and grieved, and in consequence withdrawn, and the painful discipline of separation and chastisement may be substituted for loving fellowship (Hos 5:15; Isa 57:17). No loss can be more grievous. Far better the keenest application of the scourge than the sentence–Ephraim is joined to his idols; let him alone. (W. G. Blaikie, D. D.)
The redeemed sinner a Scruple of God
I. Whose the Christian is. Before the apostle tells us this, he makes it evident that we must have some master. Ye are not your own! You are bondmen. And this is no mere figure of speech. I know that if we look around us, it does not appear true. Freedom, independence, is the boast of earth and the pride of man; but go into heaven, and the very sound of it would dismay. The creatures real glory and happiness consist in his willing dependence on the God who made him. And this the Christian feels. While others are proudly asking who is lord over them, he knows himself to be Gods property. And this is true of the Christian at all times. God says concerning every living soul and every clay-built dwelling-place a soul has occupied, They are Mine.
II. How he became Gods. There were several ways by which one man might become the property of another.
1. He might be born of a slave, and the owner of his parent would have a right to him also. And if Christian fathers could entail a glorious bondage on their children, what pangs and fears would many be spared!
2. He might be purchased. And this was a transaction so common that all would enter into the meaning of any illustration drawn from it. Money transferred the Greek slave from one master to another; so the blood of Jesus is the means whereby the sinner is rescued from his native thraldom, and brought into the glorious liberty of the children of God. By sin he became the servant and property of Satan. The blood of Christ makes an atonement for the transgressors sin; in a legal sense, it does away with it, and thus annihilates that on which Satans title to him rests.
III. What God makes him. A temple, which imports–
1. A rebuilding, a restoration. Man was originally the temple of Jehovah, but sin entered, and, in one short hour, this noble piece of Jehovahs workmanship became a mournful ruin. Some traces indeed of its original glory may still be discovered, but to what do they amount? They serve only to show the greatness of its degradation. His lofty understanding overthrown; his affections, which once rose to the skies, now grovelling on the earth; a spiritual being, and yet bounded in his ideas and enjoyments by material objects. But the blood of Christ having ransomed, now the grace of Christ transforms him. In the very hour when he becomes the Lords, a work of restoration is commenced within him, that never ends till it brings shape and beauty and glory out of a mass of ruins. And this is sanctification.
2. Dedication. It is this which distinguishes a temple from every other building. The purchased sinner is consecrated to holy purposes.
3. Residence, the abode of the Deity within it, to whom it is consecrated. We must labour to take in the idea of God dwelling within us; not carrying on His work of mercy in the heart like a bystander, but as leaven works in the meal, mingling itself with the mass it is changing. To the man of the world this is all a mystery, perhaps a delusion. And no wonder. It is understood only by experience, and of things like this he has had no experience. To the man of God it is a blessed reality. God never enters the heart alone; blessings unspeakable follow in His train–light end purity and joy.
IV. What God expects from him–glory. Now the glory of God is not such a glory as results to a man from the circumstances in which he is placed; its source is to be found in Gods intrinsic excellences. To glorify Him, therefore, is to bring these excellences into light. And the redeemed sinner does this.
1. Passively. His very redemption is an amazing exhibition of the Divine attributes. In this point of view, the creation of a world is as nothing to the salvation of his lost soul.
2. Actively. We are so to live and act that all who see us may be reminded by us of God. Now it is by the body chiefly as an instrument that the work must be done. The seat of religion is the soul, but its effects will be visible in the frame which the soul animates. (C. Bradley, M. A.)
The sacredness of the person
1. The whole person of the believer is as sacred to God as the Temple was. Stronger language is impossible.
(1) In both the plan is Divine.
(2) In both human agency was called into requisition. In the building of the Temple and in the salvation of the soul man must work out the plan.
(3) In both the work is transcendent.
(4) But the chief point is the fact that the Temple was the dwelling-place of God typical of His indwelling in the regenerate heart.
2. Our endeavour will be to consider the sacredness and preciousness of the persons of the saints in the light of the price of our redemption. That we should take our stand by the Cross in order to obtain the highest view of human nature may not be consonant with the opinions of many. There are other standpoints.
(1) There is the commercial standpoint. On this pinnacle you may stand for a lifetime to witness incessant activities in the hives of industry, which offer their tribute of praise to the greatness and dignity of human life.
(2) Look also at the results of scientific research; what a mass of wonders meets your eye!
(3) There is also the literary standpoint, whence we see mind, like a cataract, pouring its contents in numberless volumes.
(4) Art is no less wonderful. But to none of these lights do we now ask you to come. Ascend Calvary where the noblest view of human life is obtainable.
I. The purpose of the saviours life was to redeem mankind. Every great life has its purpose bound up in its very inclination and disposition. This is pre-eminently true of the life of Jesus. The purpose to save men preceded every thought, and left its impress on every act.
II. To ransom mankind was the ruling passion in the life of jesus. The life of the Saviour was unique in the fulfilment of its design.
1. His life was one supreme effort that men may feel that the salvation of the soul is the highest of all objects.
2. The cold reception He received did not damp His ardour.
III. To redeem men jesus laid down his life. It was then the entire surrender of the price became apparent.
IV. What jealous care must be taken to guard this temple from the intrusion of sin! God dwells in you; let no unhallowed thought enter. Let the body be pure. There are two steps in entire consecration–the Spirit of God must sanctify the soul, and the soul must sanctify the body. Therefore, touch no unclean thing. (Weekly Pulpit.)
The Christians obligation to a holy life
Note–
1. That sinners of every class are excluded from heaven (1Co 6:9).
2. That sinners of every class have been changed (1Co 6:11).
3. That those who have been changed are under immense obligations to cultivate a holy life. The text teaches us–
I. That the Christians body is the temple of God. The body is frequently called so (1Co 3:16; 2Co 6:16; Eph 2:22). Three ideas are suggested–
1. Special connection with God. God is everywhere, but He had a special connection with the Temple of old. God is with all men, but Thus saith the high and lofty One who inhabiteth eternity, &c.
2. Special consecration to God.
3. Special manifestation of God. Though the universe reveals God, yet, in the Temple was the Shekinah. There is more of God seen in a good mans life than elsewhere throughout the world.
II. That the Christians being is the property of God. Ye are not your own.
1. This does not mean–
(1) That your personality is net your own. You will never be absorbed in God.
(2) That your character is not your own. Character is the creation of a moral being–an untransferable thing.
2. It means that our existence is absolutely at His command; that He has a sovereign right to do with us whatever is pleasing in His sight. The reason of this is assigned. We are bought with a price. Christ has redeemed us, and has laid on us the strongest conceivable obligation to live a godly life (Rev 14:5).
III. That the Christians duty is to glorify God. Not to make Him more glorious than He is–this is impossible. A holy mind is glorified in the realisation of its ideals. St. Pauls Cathedral glorifies architecturally Sir Christopher Wren, inasmuch as it is the realisation of his idea. Man glorifies God when he realises in his life Gods ideal of a man. All beings glorify God as far as they realise His idea of their existence. This includes two things–
1. That the human body be under the absolute government of the soul. The crime and curse of humanity are that matter governs mind; the body rules the soul.
2. That the human soul be under the government of supreme love to God. Love always–
(1) Seeks to please the object.
(2) Reflects the object.
(3) Lives in the object. (D. Thomas, D. D.)
Gods Temple
When Pompey captured Jerusalem he entered the Temple. On reaching the vast curtain that hung across the holy of holies, into which none but the high priest could enter, and that only on one day of the year, he wondered what the dark recess might contain. He drew the veil aside, but the glory had departed and there was nothing there. How many Christians to-day are like that? Temples without a God. All beautiful outside. But when we lift the veil and pass beyond it to where the glory should be there is nothing to be seen. The glory is gone. This brings to our remembrance the old legend which tells us that on the night before the temple on Zion was burnt, the solemn words of the retreating Divinity were heard sounding through it, Let us depart. I will arise and return unto My place till they acknowledge their offences. Should this voice be heard to-day by you, let your cry be, Abide with me, King of life and glory. Leave me not! And the answer will come, This is My rest for ever, here–mystery of love–will I dwell, for I have desired it, even the temple of thy heart.
The temple of God must not be defaced
What right has any man or any woman to deface the temple of the Holy Ghost? What is the ear? Why, it is the whispering-gallery of the human soul. What is the eye? It is the observatory God constructed, its telescope sweeping the heavens. What is the hand? An instrument so wonderful that when the Earl of Bridgewater bequeathed in his will 8,000 sterling for treatises to be written on the wisdom, power, and goodness of God, and Dr. Chalmers found his subject in the adaptation of external nature to the moral and intellectual constitution of man, and the learned Dr. Whewell found his subject in astronomy, Sir Charles Bell, the great English anatomist and surgeon, found his greatest illustration of the wisdom, power, and goodness of God in the construction of the human hand, writing his whole book on that subject. So wonderful are these bodies that God names His own attributes after different parts of them. His omniscience–it is Gods eye. His omnipresence–it is Gods ear. His omnipotence–it is Gods arm. The upholstery of the midnight heavens–it is the work of Gods fingers. His life-giving power–it is the breath of the Almighty. His dominion–the government shall be upon His shoulder. A body so Divinely honoured and so Divinely constructed, let us be careful not to abuse it. When it becomes a Christian duty to take care of our health, is not the whole tendency toward longevity? If I toss my watch about recklessly, and drop it on the pavement, and wind it up any time of day or night I happen to think of it, and often let it run down, while you are careful with your watch, and you never abuse it, and you wind it up at just the same hour every night, and then put it away in a place where it will not suffer from the violent changes of atmosphere, which watch will last the longer? Common sense answers. Now, the human body is Gods watch. You see the hands of the watch, you see the face of the watch; but the beating of the heart is the ticking of the watch. Oh! be careful and do not let it run down. (T. De Witt Talmage.)
Keep thyself pure
(sermon to young men):–
1. Do not be surprised at the intensity of this remonstrance. Only think what a conception St. Paul had of the purity which Christ required; think what a sink of iniquity was the city of Corinth. It was London and Paris in one. It combined the worship of Plutus and Venus. The extravagance of its luxury was only matched by the depth of its licentiousness. Corinth was at that time the Vanity Fair of the Roman Empire. You might be tempted to say–Ah! no Christian could remain pure in such a place. So some of the young men of Corinth thought, and the apostle wrote to them that it was an entire mistake. I believe some of you young men have just the same notion that these Corinthians had. You say London is quite as trying to ones principles as ever Corinth was. Perhaps so; yet even in Corinth there were those who remained proof against contamination. The grace of God proved sufficient for them.
2. Of course, he is here writing to Christian men (1Co 6:11). It was of little use to exhort others to a life of purity. An unconverted man regards himself as his own property, and naturally feels that he may deal with that property as he chooses. The alternative is to be the redeemed of the Lord Jesus (1Co 6:20). Christ gave His life for our salvation, that all who accept of Him should be saved; and if we believe, He claims us as His own. This is not a hardship, but a joyous liberty. And the secret of it is, that He puts His Holy Spirit within us, making us new creatures, with new desires, new likings, new motives.
3. Our body then becomes the temple of this Divine Spirit, and all its members are under His control. It is a very solemn and suggestive metaphor. There is no consecrated edifice that is really so sacred as the body of a Christian. The temple at Jerusalem has for ages been laid in ruins:; the only temples God now owns are the two which Paul so clearly defines in this epistle; first, the spiritual society of His own people in the aggregate (1Co 3:16), and, secondly, the fleshly frame of each individual believer.
4. Perhaps the most common plea with which the impure quiet conscience is that which the apostle here challenges, Our bodies are our own; we may do with them what we will. But they are not your own, says Paul; your bodies are the purchased property of the Lord, and are consecrated by the indwelling of the Holy Spirit. What an argument against self-indulgence in any form! These are, as we are told in this chapter, sins against the body; desecrations of Gods own temple! And if any man defile the temple of God, him shall God destroy. You recollect that, when Christ was about to visit the Jewish Temple of old, and found its hallowed precincts defiled, He made a scourge of cords, and drove out all the vile intruders. There are young men in some of our mercantile houses, respectable in appearance, and gentlemanly in bearing, who, through vicious indulgence, have already gathered a hell around them, from whose tortures they can find no escape. How did they begin? By being irregular in their habits, careless in making acquaintanceships, tampering with stimulants, and theatre-going, and gambling; and finally, every conceivable form of Satanic revelry! Ah! let me ask, What fruit had ye then in those things whereof ye are now ashamed? for the end of those things is death.
5. Oh, the heartlessness of vice! It is not so long ago since a young man of good family., excellent prospects, and pleasing address, died miserably like a dog in Paris, with not one to shed a tear over his cold clay, of all the depraved profligates that had sponged him and joined in his hilarious orgies.
6. There are plenty who will try to persuade you that it is a sign of weakness to be pure, and call you verdant, orapuritanical, and ask if you are still tied to your mothers apron-strings. And, unless you are prepared to stand that vulgar bluster, you are all but certain to be caught; and from the gates of hell shall ascend another shout of victory. I remember what a thrill went through me, as I first gazed upon the gloomy walls of the Prison de la Roquette, in Paris, which is set apart for criminals that are condemned to be executed, and read over those huge, hideous gates the inscription, Abandon hope all ye who enter here! Bat hardly less hopeless are those who once enter upon the path of the profligate. Facilis descensus Averni. Oh, keep a thousand miles from the verge of the pit! Avoid everything that is likely to act as an incentive to sin.
7. Perhaps you think of these bodies as mere temporary tabernacles, soon to be taken down and dissolved. There is a certain measure of truth in this, of course. But in a higher sense, the Christians body is not a tabernacle, but a temple, a permanent and enduring structure (Rom 8:11). Oh, with what a magnitude of interest and importance does this thought invest these fleshly temples! Some time ago an aged saint was being borne to his burial. He had been very poor, and with indecent haste they were shuffling his coffin out of their way, as though glad to get rid of him, when an old minister who observed it, said, Tread softly, for you are carrying a temple of the Holy Ghost. (J. Thain Davidson, D. D.)
Ye are not your own, for ye are bought with a price.—
Ye are not your own
1. To be our own is our very greatest ambition. To be our own masters, that is nature. To feel bought with a price, to forego all independence, to own ourselves Gods property, and to seek His glory–that is grace.
2. When Satan first attacked our first parents, nothing could have done so well as this, Ye shall be as gods; and, in that reach to be their own, they perished.
3. God has been pleased so to order it, that no man can truly say, I am my own; Know ye not that to whom ye yield yourselves servants to obey, his servants ye are, &c. Oh, we all know how we are trammelled by circumstances, there is not a single action in our life that is perfectly free. In what a higher sense this word is true of those to whom it was said, Ye are not your own.
4. Of all the happy conditions upon earth, the happiest is to give up the whole heart to an authority which the whole heart can quite love and respect–an authority also which only needs proprietorship to make the relationship exquisite and the engagement perfect. Note–
I. Gods property in you.
1. Had one whole world been given for your salvation the price would have been a large one; but the whole universe would not have given so great a sum as the death of Christ. One single life offered for you would have been vast, but Essential Life Himself was the ransom of your soul. Ought you to be a poor, wretched slave, to fear sin, death, and hell, when the Son of God took fear, sin, death, and hell into His own heart to make you free?
2. The art of man may contrive a thing, and he has a right to anything that he has made. But he contrives out of what he finds already made, not what he brings into creation. But God made your body, soul, and spirit. A father has a right to his child, but God has done more than made you His child, for He has given you the spirit of a child, to cry Abba Father. A husband has a property in his wife–but marriage is only a type of the union between Christ and His Church. Every man has a right to his own body–Christ has more than a right to His body, being the Head, and we all members in particular; so that each condition of life teaches us with one common voice, Ye are not your own.
II. The consequences arising from that fact.
1. The great privilege which attaches to being the property of God. What-ever property one has, it entails certain duties upon the proprietors, and certainly God will not fail in fulfilling the great relationship in which He stands to His creatures. Are you not your own, but Gods? Then observe all things are yours, &c. God holds Christ–Christ holds you–you hold everything. Then if you are not your own, nothing which you have is your own, not your cares, griefs, or sins. God has undertaken for you in everything. The member may pass everything up to its Head–the thing possessed may refer everything to its possessor.
2. The duties which spring out of this great privilege.
(1) God has made you a part of His Church, the body of Christ. In that Church we all belong one to another. Each has his particular gift to contribute to the mutual good, one has love, another intelligence, another experience–all belong to the Church.
(2) This claim of Gods proprietorship is not perfectly recognised. We may assign Him a part of our lives–a part of our money–a part of our time–a part of our energies–a part of our affections, but God will have no partnerships. He is too great to be a partner, He requires all of us. God is worthy of everything–yield all yourself to Him. (J. Vaughan, M. A.)
Man acting independent of God
The principle which is recognised in these words is the very reverse of that by which all men are naturally actuated. We reason, we act, not as if our bodies and our spirits were Gods, but as if they were our own. This is the fault of human nature. Man is a fallen creature, in a state of apostasy. He has cast off his allegiance to God. God is not in all his thoughts; Gods authority is not acknowledged, His glory is not regarded, His law is not obeyed. And what is the cause of all this? Does he not know that he is Gods? Is he ignorant that all he is, and all he has, are from God? If the authority of God can only be established in the conscience, if His right to reign in the heart, and to demand all we are and have, be once acknowledged, what solicitude, what sorrow for sin, what opposition to self, what efforts, what prayers, what gratitude, what submission, will be the result! And who can escape the conviction that the whole heart, and mind, and soul and strength, should be given unto God?
I. What can more clearly show that we think ourselves our own, than presuming to devise our own religion? God has vouchsafed to us a communication of His purposes. He has favoured us with the inestimable blessing of revelation. Now what is the disposition with which we should receive it? We know that it is with meekness we should receive the engrafted word. But where is this meekness to be found? Truly not in natural men. It is not the religion which is most agreeable to the revelation of God, but most consonant with the opinions of the world, which they adopt. There is an amazing insolence and impiety, and casting off subjection in calling good evil and evil good, in adding to the Word of God or in taking from it, and thus in virtually finding fault with the instructions of Divine wisdom, which is in fact finding fault with God Himself, and expressing a wish that He were the reverse of what He is. It is saying, We are our own, and we will have a religion according to our own wisdom and our own wishes. It is a dangerous thing, however plausible, to contend for the right of private judgment, and to suppose that if we only follow the dictates of our own conscience, and adopt sentiments such as we think to be sound, we must be right. The rule of faith and the rule of practice remain uninfluenced by the changes of conscience, and immutably the same, whether conscience approves and disapproves, perfectly or imperfectly. And a man is equally responsible to God whether his conscience is enlightened or unenlightened, and every time he contends for the authority of conscience in opposition to that of God, he does in fact, like that man of sin, oppose and exalt himself above all that is called God, or that is worshipped, so that he as God, sitteth on the throne of God, showing himself that he is God. Error is far from being harmless. It has a most pernicious effect upon practice. And in proportion to the importance which is attached to sentiments is the evil which those that are erroneous produce.
II. We act as if we were our own by doing our own will. A respect unto all Gods commandments is the only thing which can prove our regard to His will. If we keep the whole law, with the exception of one point, we are guilty of all. Whether, therefore, we are moral, or immoral, and whether we observe religious duties, or neglect them, we are, in all this, consulting our own will, and acting upon the supposition that we are our own. Nor is the case at all altered by our good conduct proceeding from conscientious motives and the fear of Gods wrath. For a mans conscience may be awakened, and his fears excited, so as to constrain him to do many things with the view of conciliating Gods favour, and saving his soul, while at the same time his partial obedience furnishes abundant evidence that his own will is still preferred to the will of God, and that, in the most plausible parts of his conduct, he is not actuated by any genuine principles of obedience.
III. We act as if we were our own by seeking our own ends. Whatever we do in an unregenerate state, whether it be in itself good or bad, we seek in it an end that is not worthy of God. We have said that the true end of man is to glorify God. But men seek, not the honour of God, but their own honour. They not only do their own will, but they do it for their own purposes. The original depravity of man is so entire that it is a difficult and long-protracted business to make him, with all his new and Divine nature, propose the glory of God as the end of all his ways. (M. Jackson.)
Gods right to our services on the ground of creation
I. Because we were made by Him. The more we know of the structure of the human frame, how fearfully and wonderfully we are made, the more are we persuaded that it is He that hath made us and not we ourselves. And if we consider that we are made of the dust of the earth, that if God bad not breathed into us the breath of life, we must have been nothing better than the dust under our feet; we shall see the propriety of glorifying God in our bodies which are His. And if we contemplate the rational understanding, the immortal spirit, by which we are distinguished from the beasts that perish, and assimilated to angels, and to God, we shall perceive that these are a still higher ground of claim upon us for services the most spiritual. When human creatures use their bodies and their ,spirits for the low purposes of sensuality, vanity, and ambition, or without any view to the service and honour of Him whose they both are, they are guilty of an injustice to God and a robbery of God, which, if conscience were not stupefied or perverted, would fill them with horror and overwhelm them with fear. Who call calculate the value of an immortal existence and of a capacity for happiness, exalted as its Divine original, and lasting as eternity? Who can calculate his obligations to God for such an existence? And who, then, can calculate the extent of his wickedness in habitually forgetting that he is not his own in using that existence without any avowed aim to the will and glory of its Author? I need not say that the bodies of them whose god is their belly, whose glory is in their shame, and who mind earthly things, are not used for the purpose of honouring God, for in all this Gods laws are violated and His glory given to another. All who live in pleasure are dead while they live and dishonour God in their bodies. And it is equally clear that they who live in malice and envy, hateful, and hating one another, as well as they who argue against religion and would discourage piety, are not glorifying God in their spirits, but openly dishonouring Him. Have you considered, and do you act upon the principle, that as all your faculties of body and of mind are Gods, they ought to be employed for the promotion of His glory?
II. We were made for God. The great end of creation is the glory of God. And all things, but men and devils, do glorify Him. Angels in heaven glorify Him, and all things in heaven and earth, and in the waters under the earth, glorify Him, by manifesting His perfections. Fallen men and fallen angels only answer not the design of their creation. Now let this truth be remembered–that you were made for the purpose of glorifying God. And would you oppose and defeat the end of your existence? Shall there be no concurrence between the design of God in giving you life and your design in living? How great must be that guilt which is contracted by living in opposition to the great end of God in calling us into being! Few things excite more opposition in the human mind than the attempt to reinstate God upon His throne, to assert His right to reign in our hearts, the Sovereign of our thoughts and affections, and to maintain that it is our duty to resolve all we think, and speak, and do, into His will. This is being righteous overmuch; this is enthusiasm. Now, can anything show more clearly how completely we have departed from God, how totally opposed to Him we are in the spirit of our minds? Remember we must all appear before the judgment-seat of Christ, and how shall we dare to appear as usurpers before our Sovereign and our Judge? If you exalt yourselves against God He will bring you down, and who shall deliver? (J. Vaughan, M. A.)
Not your own
1. The passion for freedom is probably the strongest. Nothing is more wonderful than the secret working of this passion in securing gradual emancipation. There have been times when ages of serfdom had apparently crushed it out; but at the first impulse from without it was seen that the fire of freedom did not smoulder; and when the impulse has grown strong the passion has sometimes maddened men, blinding them to all sense of justice. And so the spirit of freedom has in turn made slaves of them. It was so in Paris a hundred years ago.
2. A large proportion of the members of this church were slaves. You can imagine what a gospel the life of Christ would be to these. And, to the honour of those who organised the first churches, we must always remember that they were not afraid to welcome the slave. Well, then, you may say, Was it not a cruel thing of the apostle to remind them that they were not their own? Have you ever wondered why Paul should describe himself as the bond slave of Christ? Was it not because the people to whom he was writing were slaves, and as if he would say, I too am a slave; I too am bound, not with iron, but by love? What a grand revelation that was to the slaves! Ye are Christs. No chains or bondage could alter that. Better the fetter and the chain with Christ than the purple and the throne without Him.
3. And now these words have just as splendid a ring for us to-night. The law has discovered that they are true in part. The other day they brought before a court of justice a frightened, miserable woman, who had tried to drown herself. She pleaded that her life was not worth preserving. She said it was hers, and she could do with it as she liked. But the law stepped in and said, You are not your own. Your life is not your own. You have no right to squander it. This meant that the law is founded on the Christian principle that every mans life belongs to his fellow-men as well as to himself. And that was what Christ came to teach. His life was given for everybody.
4. But the idea is not only what you may not do, but what you must do If you are Christs, then every thought, word, action, must be what Christ would have them be. When Peter and John first began to preach in Jerusalem they were thrown into prison, and strictly commanded not to preach any more in that name. But Peter answered We must. It is not a question whether we should like an easy-going life. We must obey God, though it leads us to stripes, imprisonment, and the cross (see also Act 21:11-14).
5. But perhaps you think that such claims are only strong when we reach manhood or womanhood. But think of Christ, at twelve years of age, saying, I must be in My Fathers house. Twelve years of age, but He felt the power of the Divine must, and yet that One was Lord of heaven and earth. Surely if any one could go through life with no constraint it was He; but He saw that to redeem mankind, even Omnipotence could not refuse to take the cross from childhood to the grave. Even Christ pleased not Himself.
6. And now what part has that Divine must begun to play in your life? Do you feel that it is stronger than the must of men? Young man in business, would you let the word of an earthly master outweigh the command of the heavenly Master? Do you think you can slight Christ on the week-day and make it up to Him on the Sunday? Young men, newly awakening to find how strong the streams of tendency are in this world, look at life in the light of Christ, and not in the light of what everybody says and does. It is no excuse for looseness of conduct that it is the fashion. Christ waged relentless war against many of the fashions of His day. Servants, remember whose you are and whom you serve. You can hire your souls out and no wages can recompense you for the loss of them. There may be some here who have received from the Master on trust certain talents which they have been hiding in the earth. If you are letting your lives rust, remember you are abusing anothers property, for you are not your own, &c. (C. S. Horne, M. A.)
Not our own
1. The first motives which influence us in Christian experience are usually self-regarding; and it is natural and right that they should be so. Salvation stands at the beginning of the Christian course, in order that our self-regarding interests may be set at rest, and that we may thus be left free to pursue an end that lies outside them, and yet is in perfect harmony with them.
2. We are not only redeemed from death, but purchased unto God. So long as we claimed to be our own, Satan possessed a certain legal right over us. He moved man to break away from his original relations with God, and to claim himself for himself. In doing so man became a spiritual outlaw, and as such fell under the supremacy of the prince of lawlessness. The great enemy held him by right as well as by might, because it is Gods law that what we sow we reap.
3. But, on the other hand, since Satan owes his power against us to the operation of Divinely-ordained law, when once the necessities of law are satisfied, the claims of Satan against us are cancelled. Thus we are ransomed from Satan the moment that we are justified before God, and brought back to that position from which man fell of being Gods and not our own. Only Adam belonged to God because He had made him for Himself; we belong to God because He has bought us back. Thus a new element is introduced into the case, and one that appeals to all the strongest emotions of our nature. He who robs a Divine Creator of that which He has made for His own glory commits a crime, no doubt; but he who has been brought back from the fatal effects of this crime by the dearth of his Benefactor, and then declines to recognise his obligation, is guilty of an enormity which casts that other crime into the shade.
4. As the result of redemption we come under the influence of Him whose will is law throughout the universe, and whose entrance into our nature insures our true moral freedom. The law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus makes us free from the law of sin and death. But here is a new property claim, a claim de facto where the others were claims de jure. His presence is our liberty, for where the Spirit of God is there is liberty; but it is the liberty which comes by full surrender of ourselves to Him. He does not enter our nature either as a conqueror, trampling down all resistance, nor as a mere auxiliary to help us out of a difficulty; rather as a constitutional Sovereign to reign according to the true laws of our ransomed nature.
5. But it is not by any means the rule that we apprehend His claims all at once. When the benefit that we seek has been obtained, it is only natural that, having been greatly forgiven, we should greatly love. But, alas! these warm feelings do not always last, when they subside the devotion subsides with them. It often happens, therefore, that after a considerable time has passed from the moment of conversion, the Holy Spirit leads us back, as it were, to the cross to learn more fully the lesson which we only partially learned. We find perhaps that we have been acting as though God existed for us, instead of realising that we exist for God; and then comes the definite question leading up to an equally definite decision, Is it to be self or God? When the Spirit of God thus induces a crisis, it often happens that a very marked and definite act of consecration ensues, bringing about an entirely new epoch in our Christian life. (W. Hay Aitken, M. A.)
Ye are bought with a price.—
Gods right to our services on the ground of redemption
If on the ground of creation God has a right to our services and may demand that we glorify Him with our bodies, and with our spirits because He hath made them, it must be evident that His right to them on the ground of redemption is still stronger.
I. The guilt which soul and body had contracted, Jesus Christ hath not bought us with a price when innocent and deserving. His redemption supposes immeasurable guilt, the violation of a law which is holy and just and good, the rejection of Divine authority, the contempt of Divine majesty, the impeachment of Divine wisdom, the abuse of Divine godness, the defiance of Divine vengeance, the crime of injustice, and ingratitude, and rebellion, and sacrilege. Look at the defiled body and the polluted spirit, see in them everything that is earthly and sensual and devilish, and say if there is in them any quality to attract the Divine favour. Is there not everything fitted to excite the abhorrence of Him who is of purer eyes than to behold iniquity? And yet He redeems you! He redeems you from the vileness of your bodies, and the apostasy of your spirits. What, then, is the perverseness, the accumulated ingratitude and sacrilege of using bodies and spirits so redeemed for the purpose of still dishonouring Him!
II. But connected with this guilt is danger. Every sinner is exposed to the curse of God, and, but for redemption, must perish eternally. It is redemption from ruin by which you are urged to glorify God, in your body and in your spirit, which are Gods. Who does not feel the force of this argument? Who can feet that he owes his deliverance from ruin, his deliverance from even temporal distress, to the benevolent exertions of a friend, without feeling himself bound by ties of gratitude to serve him to the utmost of his power? And shall that be withheld from Christ and from God which is so freely yielded to man?
III. Christ redeems the body and soul, not only from ruin, but ruin immeasubable. Who can calculate the misery of them who are destroyed both body and soul in hell? Is a cold and reluctant service an appropriate return for deliverence from everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of His power?
IV. Christ has not only redeemed body and soul from everlasting destruction, but by His redemption has procured for them immeasurable felicity. Does the circumstance of our ears being familiar with the sound of fulness of joy in the presence of God, and of pleasures at His right hand for evermore, render the felicity of heaven less valuable? Substantiate all this felicity. View it as a reality, as a reality at hand, as that which yourselves must possess, or not possess, in the course of a few fleeting moments, and then say whether there is not a reasonableness, a suitableness in glorifying God in those spirits, and in those bodies, which are to be the subjects of this felicity through the efficacy of His redemption.
V. The greatness of the price with which you have been bought. You were not redeemed with corruptible things such as silver and gold, but with the precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot. And can you, after this purchase, question His right to your bodies and your spirits? Can you think that you are justified in withholding your services from Jesus Christ, in living to yourselves, in not inquiring into His will, in not devoting yourselves to His glory? Why should the principles of justice be recognised in your transactions with men, and renounced in your dealings with God? But God demands your services, not merely because He has bought them with a price, hut because in buying them He extends to you–
VI. The most immeasurable mercy. It is infinite mercy that redeems you from destruction the most awful, infinite mercy that exalts you to happiness the most inconceivable, infinite mercy that buys you with a price the most costly, by all this infinite mercy so manifested you are urged to glorify God. How fervent should be our love, how animated our exertions! Every thought and every affection should be Gods. Were we suitably affected by His love, we should see sin and ingratitude in every thought and word and work. The insensibility and worldliness of our minds and the inadequacy of our best returns would humble us in the dust. And our disproportionate humility itself, for making returns so imperfect, would be numbered among our grievous offences. The more of heart and soul we put into our services the more of freedom and delight shall we enjoy. We can imagine no happiness equal to that of living as not our own, living to God only, constrained by gratitude, and directed by justice to serve Him whose we are. (M. Jackson.)
Redemption and its claims
(text and 1Co 7:23):–
I. ye are bought with a price.
1. Redemption is a greater mercy than creation. It is no mean blessing to have been made, and to have been made a man rather than a dog, to have been blest with intellect and an immortal spirit; but for all that it would be better for thee that thou hadst never been born, if thou art not redeemed.
2. Providence also calls before our minds a great mass of mercies; but providence is second in its blessedness to redemption.
3. Redemption is that which gives effect to all the other great blessings of God.
(1) Election, the well-head of grace, needs the conduit-pipe of redemption to bring its streams down to sinners. We are chosen of God, but unto obedience, and sprinkling of the blood of Jesus.
(2) Redemption is the foundation of all real peace.
(3) It is through redeeming grace that we expect to enter heaven.
II. Therefore redemption is the Lords paramount claim upon us. Other claims, such as those of creation and providence, are forcible, but this claim is overwhelming. The love of Christ constraineth us. Think–
1. What you were redeemed from.
(1) Sin.
(2) Its punishment.
2. Reflect most lovingly upon that dear friend who redeemed you. Not an angel, but Christ, who is God over all, blessed for ever.
3. Then think of the price He paid. The text does not tell us about it, and surely the reason is that words cannot express the mighty sum. The famous painter, when he drew the picture of Agamemnon at the sacrifice of his daughter, felt that he could not depict the sorrow of the fathers countenance, and therefore he wisely put a veil over it, and represented him as hiding his face from the fearful sight. So the apostle seems to have felt. This price has been fully paid. I have seen lands which have belonged to men who were reputed to be rich, but there was a heavy mortgage upon them. But there is no mortgage on the saints. It is finished, said the Saviour, and finished it was.
III. The extent of this claim.
1. The first text says–
(1) That it includes–
(a) The body. This body of yours is holy, and it will rise again from the dead. I charge you, by the blood of Christ, never defile this body either by drunkenness or by lust.
(b) The spirit. Keep that pure too. Christ has not bought these eyes that they should read novels calculated to lead me into vanity and vice, such as are published nowadays. Christ has not bought this brain of mine that I may revel in the perusal of works of blasphemy and filthiness. He has not given me a mind that I may drag it through the mire. Your whole manhood belongs to God if you are a Christian. Every faculty, talent, possibility of your being–all were bought.
(2) That consequently Ye are not your own, which implies–
(a) That I may not claim the right to do what I please, but what Christ pleases. I am to please my Master in everything.
(b) That I may not follow my own tastes if in any way I should so bring dishonour to the name of Christ.
(c) That I must not trust my own reasonings. If I were my own teacher, then, of course, I should learn my lessons from my own book; but I have a Rabbi, even Jesus, and I am resolved with meekness to learn of Him.
(d) That I must not seek my own ends. I must not live in this world that I may trade and get riches, but it must be that I may use them for Him.
2. In my second text the apostle draws another inference: Be not ye the servants of men.
(1) Do not even follow good men slavishly. Do not say, I am of Paul; I am of Apollos; I am of Calvin. Who is Calvin and who is Wesley but ministers by whom ye believed as the Lord gave unto you?.
(2) Do not pin your faith to anybodys sleeve. Keep close to Christ.
(3) Do not give yourselves up to party spirit.
(4) Do not give yourself to any scientific speculation, educational effort, or to any philanthropic enterprise so as to divert our minds from the grand old cause of Jesus and our God.
(5) Do not follow the fashions of the world.
(6) Let no man be your master. If ye have masters according to the flesh, serve them with all faithfulness; but as to any master over your spirit, allow no one to be so; consciences were made for God alone. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Redemption, and its claims
There is within us a strange tendency to the acquisition of property, and therefore there is something startling in this announcement. We have been gloating upon our fancied proprietorship; it awakens us to the consciousness that we are only stewards. Nay, it lays hold upon ourselves, Ye are not your own. And this may perhaps account for the comparatively trifling success with which religion has been favoured. It allows no compromise, it claims supreme and undivided homage. Notice–
I. The great fact asserted, that we are purchased, and tee position into which we are brought because of that purchase.
1. While we would insist upon this as the prime cause of our being the property of God, we would not be supposed to invalidate others. He has made us, and not we ourselves. He has, from the beginning, even until now, preserved the creatures He has made. But in redemption He has so impressively displayed His interest in our welfare, His yearning over His purchased possession. The apostles language implies an acknowledgment of our fall, and refers to the provision of that covenant by which that fall was to be remedied. You will not fail to remark how Christ Himself spoke of those who believe on Him as peculiarly His own. My sheep, &c. His great purpose was that He might purify unto Himself a peculiar people, zealous of good works. If that people are spoken of in their collective capacity, they are as the Church of God, which He has purchased with His own blood. As to these declarations, the statement of St. Peter comes as a hallowed appendix. Ye were redeemed, not with corruptible things, &c. Now, surely there can be no more strictly legal title to property than this.
2. Note an exquisite fitness in the connection between the purchase, and the position into which that purchase brings us. Such is the grasping tendency of the human heart, that it must have something to lay hold of outside itself, and it will never willingly denude itself of any object of solicitude and love. Hence, if you would dispossess the mind of one object, you, must overbear it with the preference of another. If you extirpate one affection you must introduce another into its room. We see this strikingly illustrated in the progress of human life. The tastes and habits of childhood depart, but the heart is not bereft; new tastes acquire their influence, new affections exert their ascendancy. So it is in reference to matters of a higher moment. You will never drive from a worldling the pursuit which engrosses him by a mere naked demonstration of its worthlessness and folly. All that you say is true, and the man knows it; but the spell is over him. And is it not natural, when you think of the feelings of the man, and of what you are wishing him to do? You tell him to cultivate religion: it is his abhorrence. You tell him to renounce the world; why, it is all he has. Here, then, comes the question. We cannot prevail upon the heart by the simple act of resignation to give up everything unpleasing to God. May we not induce it to admit a higher affection? Here it is that the fitness of the connection becomes apparent. Ye are not your own, for ye are bought with a price. The heart, which all other means had failed to affect, is melted by the power of the Spirit, applying the gospel of God. We can deny the claim no longer; we acknowledge it at once as a natural and inalienable right, and we are bound to it with a tenderer tie, because He, to whom we are to swear our fealty, has been mysteriously one of ourselves. Our sense of possession is gratified.
3. Does not this point out the most effective method of preaching? It is not the demonstration of the moral law, but the preaching of Christ that prevails. This is the master spell; this, like the rod of the prophet, swallows up the enchantments of opposing sorcery. I announce it, then, as a natural and inalienable right. Ye are not your own. Everything around you urges to a recognition of the claim. Nature reminds you of it, as in the fulness of her gleeful melody she wakes her hymn of praise, acknowledging her dependence on Him by whom she is sustained. Providence reminds you of it. It sounds from the tomb, where the forms you loved are sleeping. Above all, grace reminds you of it. I beseech you, by the mercies of God. That is the culminating point even of an apostles motive.
II. The course of conduct which a consideration of such position is calculated to induce you to pursue. Therefore glorify God, &c. We need not remind you that by no service of yours can you increase Gods glory; but you may make it manifest. God is always glorified whenever He is seen.
1. Let your devotedness to God be entire.
(1) Glorify God in your bodies, for they are His. Beware of regarding them as a number of organs and senses to be pampered, or as stately forms to be adorned and admired. The Spirit dwells not in an unhallowed temple. In your bodies, therefore, glorify God, by temperance, chastity, and the practice of every Christian virtue; by doing without weariness, and by suffering without murmuring; by letting your hands be active in the service, and your feet swift in the way of His Commandments.
(2) Glorify God in your intellects, for they are His. How often has science poured her treasures before him who knew not God, and how much of the choicest literary art is devoted to the service of the devil! In the midst of a perverse generation, bow yourself in unconditional allegiance to the Bible. Learn the true humility of knowledge. Stand out in all the nobleness of religious decision: spirits–students of the great Spirit; minds–drinking in the lessons of the immortal mind, which transforms them while they listen.
(3) Glorify God in your whole nature, for it is His. Never mind the opposition with which you may have to contend, nor think that you live to struggle alone. Your Saviour has sent His Spirit to help you, and that Spirit now worketh in you to will and to do of His good pleasure.
2. Let your devotedness be benevolent. Spend yourselves in energetic effort for the conversion of your fellows, and for the spread of the gospel among them. And never, certainly, were we called upon more impressively to let our devotion be benevolent than now–now, when the conflict between sense and faith, between the ceremonial and the spiritual, between the idolatries and the ever-living has commenced, and a thousand voices of the universe are pealing out the challenge, Who is on the Lords side? (W. M. Punshon, LL. D.)
Redemption and its obligations
I. The proposition: Ye are not your own.
1. Note here two things:
(1) What this phrase implies–viz., That no being can be simply its own, but what is supreme, absolute, and independent; and that essence, which is its own, must he itself the end of all its actions. From these two principles it evidently follows that there is no being simply its own, but that which is the First Cause and the Last End of all beings–God. All others are
(a) Derivative beings, and flow from the Source of Being.
(b) Dependent beings, and owe their continued preservation to the goodness of God.
(c) Subordinate to the First; made for His ends and uses.
(2) What it infers. If we are not our own, then–
(a) We ought not to seek our own. But, when gain shall be preferred before godliness, what is this but a base self-seeking unworthy of a Christian–nay, of a man?
(b) We are not at our own disposal. And this should teach us patience in all the crosses and sad occurrences of our lives.
(c) We ought not to follow our own wills and affections.
(d) We ought not to look upon anything as our own.
(e) No sin should be our own.
2. Now, lest you should be put to seek for an owner, the apostle informs you who it is that lays in His claim to you, even the great and universal Lord of Heaven and Earth, whose all things are by a most absolute and indisputable right: Ye are Gods.
(1) As He is your Almighty Creator and Preserver.
(2) Your Governor.
(3) By covenant engagement and solemn promise.
(4) By profession, and our own voluntary and free acknowledgment.
(5) By the right of redemption, as in the text.
Now the love and mercy of God, in redeeming us, is far more eminent than in creating us. And therefore His right and title to us, upon this account, is far greater. For–
(a) Creation only gives us a being, and in this our sinful condition only capacitates us for woe. But redemption opens a way to happiness.
(b) Redemption has been more expensive to God than creation.
II. The reason: For ye are bought with a price.
1. What this price is (1Pe 1:18-19).
2. To whom this price was paid; to our great creditor, God.
3. What we are redeemed from.
(1) From the wrath of God.
(2) From the vassalage of the devil.
(a) His tempting power is restrained.
(b) His accusing power is rebuked.
(c) His tormenting power shall be wholly abolished.
(3) From the reigning and condemning power of sin.
(4) From the curse of the law (Gal 3:13).
III. The inference: Therefore glorify God, &c.
1. What is it to glorify God?
2. How we ought to glorify God.
(1) By a most devout adoration of His infinite perfections.
(2) By declaration of those perfections.
(3) By conforming ourselves to the likeness of them.
(4) By performing those duties which they oblige us unto; by being holy as He is holy, &c.
(1) Now the true notion of holiness is a separation from all sin and impurity.
3. What force and influence the consideration of our redemption ought to have upon us, to oblige us thus to glorify God.
(1) We are bought with a price, and therefore it is but justice and equity to glorify God. Consider–
(a) The price He paid infinitely exceeds the value of all that thou art and hast.
(b) All the use which thy Saviour can make of thee is only that thou shouldst glorify Him; and, by obedience shouldst serve to the setting forth of His praise (Tit 2:14).
(c) If thou livest not to thy Saviour, who by His death purchased thee, thou art guilty of sacrilege, the worst robbery and most branded injustice in the world.
(d) If, instead of glorifying Him by thy obedience, thou dishonourest Him by thy rebellions and impieties, thou not only defraudest Him of His servant, but, what is infinitely worse, of the very price that He paid.
(2) We are bound, not only in justice and equity, but in ingenuity and gratitude, to glorify God upon the account of our redemption. For consider–
(a) What it is you are redeemed from.
(b) With what price He hath bought us.
For consider, first, if God had put the terms of thy redemption into thy own hands, couldst thou have offered less for the ransom of thy soul? Secondly, that Christ hath infinitely abased Himself to procure thy redemption; and therefore, at least, ingenuity and gratitude should engage thee to exalt and glorify Him,
(3) In point of interest and advantage.
IV. Application. Consider–
1. It is the great end of our beings to glorify God, and indeed the noblest end that we could be created for. And if thou dost otherwise
(1) Thou degradest thyself from the dignity of thine own being.
(2) Thou degradest God too, and exaltest something above Him.
2. That God will certainly have His glory out of thee. If thou Wilt not glorify His holiness by thy obedience, thou shalt glorify His justice by thy perdition.
3. By glorifying God we do indeed but glorify ourselves. For He hath been pleased so graciously to intwist His glory and ours together, that, whilst we endeavour to promote the one, we do but indeed promote the other (1Sa 2:30). (E. Hopkins, D. D.)
Obedience the fruit of redemption
Consider–
I. Your state.
1. Ye are not your own! You are not the masters of your own actions; the framers of your own condition; the proprietors of your own persons. No being can be his own, unless he be supreme, independent, self-existent.
2. Ye are bought with a price.
II. Your duty. This reminds us–
1. Of our complex nature.
2. That the body is not to be excluded or undervalued in religion. It is the workmanship of God, and displays much of His perfection. He has redeemed it, and will glorify it. Religion is not only a real, but a visible thing. The form of godliness is nothing without the power; but when the form is produced by the power, it is comely and useful.
3. That in all the duties of religion we are indispensably bound to glorify God in our spirit, as well as in our body.
4. That we are to glorify God in our corporeal and spiritual powers respectively by exertions peculiar to each.
(1) As to the body–we are to glorify God in guarding our health; in watching our senses; in regulating our appetites; in rendering our natural refreshments and our secular callings subservient to religion, Whether, therefore, we eat or drink, &c.
(2) As to the spirit.
III. The connection between your state and your duty, or the derivation of the one from the other. Therefore. The inference is natural.
1. Does not Justice demand this dedication?
2. If we do not glorify God, are we not chargeable with the vilest ingratitude?
3. Is not this glorification of God the very end of your redemption? Were you rescued from bondage to be lawless? or to become your own masters?
4. How can you determine your actual interest in this redemption, unless you have dedicated yourselves unto God? He is the Author of eternal salvation to all them that obey Him. (W. Jay.)
Redemption by price
1. Attacks have often been made upon the doctrine of redemption, for it is well known to be the Redan of the gospel. These onslaughts have in many instances professed to be mere corrections of our phraseology. True, some may have carried ideas of the shop and the counter into their notion of redemption, but even these were nearer the truth than those who reduce the ransom paid by Christ to nothing. Paul, at any rate, was not afraid of the mercantile theory, for he writes, Ye are bought with a price. And did not Christ say that He came to give His life a ransom for many? Though we were not redeemed with corruptible things, as silver and gold, the transaction was none the less real and effective.
2. It is a high honour to our fallen race that man is the only redeemed creature in the universe. Rebellious angels are left to their doom. Hence man cost God more than the whole universe beside. The Lord could speak worlds into existence; but to erect the new creation of redeemed men He must endure the loss of His own Son.
3. This work of redemption is many-sided. We have been redeemed–
(1) In reference to Divine justice. We are justified, or reckoned as just, through the redemption which is in Christ Jesus.
(2) From the power of evil (Tit 2:14).
(3) From ourselves–as the text suggests. We have here–
I. Compensation, and yet gain.
1. Compensation. You have surrendered as believers your right and property in yourselves, for–
(1) You live, whereas you were dead.
(2) You have peace. Your sins are forgiven for Christs sake.
(3) You have joy.
(4) You have a grand reversion–a hope of glory with Christ for ever. You have received for your little the fulness which is in Christ, who is all in all.
2. Actual gain. Our loss itself is an advantage. We are set free from self, that worse than Egyptian bondage, whose wage is death. We are set free from Satan, and is not that a gain? Once the world was our lord, but what gain it is to feel that we are no longer the servants of men!
II. High value and yet lowliness.
1. Value is clearly here, for God thinks not lightly of man, but esteems him sufficiently to buy him with the richest price conceivable. You are not a thing to be trifled with. Your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost. Never, therefore, give up your body to idleness or uncleanness. Use yourselves only for honourable purposes, for God puts honour upon you.
2. You are precious, but you must yet be lowly, for whatever value there is about you, you do not belong to yourself. You are the goods and chattels of Christ: as you were once sold under sin, so are you now bought with a price. Our honour lies in our owner. God forbid that we should glory in anything except that we belong to Christ.
III. Security and yet watchfulness.
1. Security. He who owns you is able to keep you. If you were to perish, who would be the loser? Why, He to whom you belong.
2. Reason for watchfulness. Take great care of yourselves, for you are a kings treasure. If a thing is my own I may do what I like with it, but if it is entrusted to my care I must mind how I behave towards it, or else I shall be an unfaithful steward.
IV. Consecration and yet perfect liberty.
1. Consecration. You are to dedicate yourself wholly to the Lord, because you are not partly, but wholly redeemed. Do you keep back any faculty you possess from Christ? Is not this robbery? How would you like to think of that particular reservation as being unredeemed? Which portion is it which is to be unconsecrated? The body? What, have you an unredeemed body? never to rise from the dust? or do you give to Christ your heart, but reserve your mind? Have you, then, an unredeemed intellect? Withhold not your voice, but sing for Jesus, or speak for Him, if you can, &c.
2. But there is with this a perfect liberty. To be consecrated to Christ is the sure way to give to all our faculties the fullest play. If we are encased within the compass of the law we are no more restricted than a bird which is imprisoned in the air, or a fish in the ocean. Obedience to Christ is our element.
V. Submission and expectancy.
1. Submission. Ye are not your own, and therefore God has a right to do whatever He wills with you.
2. Side by side with that comes expectancy. I could not do much for myself if I were my own, but if I am Christs I expect that He will do great things for me. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Bought with a price
In one of the American slave markets an aged negro stood for sale. A gentleman asked him, My man, to whom do you belong? The slave glanced for a moment at his questioner, and then, straightening himself as best he could, said, My flesh and bones and blood belong to old Massa Carl; but my spirit am a free-born child of God, bought by the precious blood of Jesus. This was an answer which thousands who sing Britons never shall be slaves could not give. Consider the word–
I. Bought. Learn that if God bought man–
1. He values man. God has bought nothing else. All else belongs to Him, but only because He has made them.
2. He wants man. We seldom buy what we dont want. God wants the worst of us to make us better.
II. Price. There are many things we cannot value in money. An epidemic was raging in a French town. The medical men resolved that a post-mortem examination should be made of the body of one of the victims. Who would volunteer and thus sacrifice his life? One came forward; he put all his affairs straight, performed the operation, wrote his report, put it into prepared spirit, and died. Who can describe the price he paid for the welfare of others? Again, a man was dying of poverty of blood, and could only be saved by the infusion of healthy blood into his veins. A medical student bared his arm and said, Here it is; take what you want. They took a large quantity of his blood, and soon the sick man revived. By what system of accounts can you describe a price like that? Think, then, of the price of our redemption–The precious blood of Christ.
III. Glorify. In olden times men believed that they honoured God by punishing the flesh; but are we quite free from this error? Have we not cared more for souls than for bodies? Could we remember that the body should be used only for such purposes as God intends it would save a world of sorrow. Thousands are working their own bodies as they would never work their horses. Remember that they are Gods, and to be cared for as instruments for His service. (C. Leach.)
Bought with a price
1. With what ardour does the apostle pursue sin to destroy it! He is not so prudish as to let sin alone, but cries out, in plainest language, Flee fornication! The shame is not in the rebuke, but in the sin which calls for it. He chases this foul wickedness with arguments (verse 18).
2. He drags it into the light of the Spirit of God (verse 19).
3. He slays it at the Cross. Ye are bought with a price. Let us consider this last argument, that we may find therein death for our sins.
I. A blessed fact. Ye are bought with a price.
1. Ye are bought. This is that idea of redemption which modern heretics dare to style mercantile. Redemption is a greater source of obligation than creation or preservation. Hence it is a well-spring of holiness.
2. With a price. This indicates the greatness of the cost. The Father gave the Son. The Son gave Himself; His happiness, glory, body, soul. Measure the price by the bloody sweat, the Cross, the heart-break.
3. Our body and spirit are both bought with the body and spirit of Jesus.
(1) This is either a fact or not. Ye are bought, or ye are unredeemed. Terrible alternative.
(2) If a fact, it is the fact of your life. A wonder of wonders.
(3) It will remain to you eternally the grandest of all facts.
(4) It should therefore operate powerfully upon us both now and ever.
II. A plain consequence. Ye are not your own.
1. Negative. It is clear that if bought, ye are not your own. This involves–
(1) Privilege. You are not your own–
(a) Provider: sheep are fed by their shepherd.
(b) Guide: ships are steered by their pilot.
(c) Father: children loved by parents.
(2) Responsibility. We are not our own–
(a) To injure.
(b) To waste, in idleness, amusement, or speculation.
(c) To exercise caprice, and follow our own prejudices, depraved affections, wayward wills, or irregular appetites.
(d) To lend our service to another master.
(e) To serve self. Self is a dethroned tyrant. Jesus is a blessed husband, and we are His.
2. Positive. Your body and your spirit are Gods.
(1) We are altogether Gods. Body and spirit include the whole man.
(2) We are always Gods. The price once paid, we are for ever His.
(3) We rejoice that we know we are Gods, for thus–
(a) We have a beloved owner.
(b) We pursue an honoured service.
(c) We fill a blessed position. We are in Christs keeping.
III. A practical conclusion. Glorify God.
1. In your body.
(1) By cleanliness, chastity, temperance, industry, cheerfulness, self-denial, patience, &c.
(2) In a suffering body by patience unto death.
(3) In a working body by holy diligence.
(4) In a worshipping body by bowing in prayer.
(5) In a well-governed body by self-denial.
(6) In an obedient body by doing the Lords will with delight.
2. In your spirit. By holiness, faith, zeal, love, heavenliness, cheerfulness, fervour, humility, expectancy, &c.
Conclusion:
1. Remember, O redeemed one, that
(1) You will be closely watched by Christs enemies.
(2) You will be expected to be more gracious than others; and rightly so, since you claim to be Christs own.
(3) If you are not holy, the sacred name of your Redeemer, your Proprietor, and your Indweller will be compromised.
(4) But if you lead a redeemed life, your God will be honoured.
2. Let the world see what redemption can do.
3. Let the world see what sort of men Gods own are. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
God to be glorified by those bought with a price
The religion of the Bible relates to the two great branches of human duty, the things to be believed, and the things to be done. The doctrines and precepts of the gospel, though they may be distinguished, must not be separated. The objects of our faith furnish motives for duty; and duty cannot be rightly per- formed unless under the influence of the belief of these doctrines. Consider here–
I. The duty stated. To glorify God.
1. The duty is to glorify God with our bodies and spirits. Let us begin with the latter. How may we glorify God with our spirits, that is, with our rational souls? This we do–
(1) By using our reason in contemplating the character of God as made known in His works and Word.
(2) By believing and relying on all He has said.
(3) By the constant and lively exercise of pure love.
(4) By forming such purposes as are in accordance with the Divine will.
(5) By patient submission to afflictive providences.
(6) By constantly and deliberately promoting His glory.
2. Our bodies–
(1) When we preserve them from impurity and intemperance. This was the very idea which the apostle had in his mind (verse 19).
(2) When we employ them in His service.
(a) All the institutions demand the employment of our bodies. We must bow down before Him, and by external actions manifest our reverence, and praise Him with our lips.
(b) God is glorified by every species of good works which require the instrumentality of the body. Our hands may be made to glorify God when they are opened in acts of liberality and beneficence.
II. The motive offered.
1. The redemption of captives was an idea very familiar to the Greeks. As by the customs of war every prisoner was made a slave, it often happened that persons of wealthy families would be thus separated from their relatives; and it frequently happened that these relatives would send the ransom of their friend by a suitable person, who would redeem him and bring him home. What would be the feelings of a number of captives when it should be announced that a Redeemer had arrived? But when the fortunate captive heard his own name called, who can describe his exultation?
2. The deliverance of sinners by Christ bears a striking analogy to this. Men are taken captive by the devil. They cannot liberate themselves, nor can this redemption be effected by any one but the Son of God. But, though the analogy is striking, yet there are circumstances which distinguish it from that which obtains among men.
(1) When one went to redeem his friend, though he might have far to go, still he had not to go out of the world; it was necessary for Christ to descend from heaven to earth–from the throne to a manger.
(2) When an earthly redeemer set off in search of an enslaved son, or brother, he had to take with him a ransom of silver and gold. But when the Son of God came into the world to redeem lost sinners He must lay down a ransom of blood.
(3) By the nature of the sinners bondage he was first under a sentence of condemnation. Next, he was held in cords of iniquity, which no created arm could loose. And lastly, he was lying under the cruel tyranny of Satan, the worst of masters. From all these our Redeemer came to save His people. He removed the curse of the law by bearing it in His own body on the tree. He saves His people also from their sins by the washing of regeneration and the renewing of the Holy Ghost, and He dispossesses Satan by His superior power.
3. Now those who have been thus redeemed owe a debt of gratitude which, without exaggeration, may be said to be infinite. No wonder Paul judged it unnecessary to urge other motives.
Conclusion:
1. Let us reflect penitently on our culpable neglect of this great duty of glorifying God.
2. Let us endeavour to obtain a lively feeling of our obligations to the Redeemer.
3. Let us esteem it a great privilege to be the redeemed servants of the Lord.
4. Let us remember that the time which remains to us is short. (A. Alexander, D. D.)
Our duty to God urged from His right in us
I. An important matter of fact to be believed and laid to heart.
1. Ye are not your own, &c. As to the reason of this, we may observe–
(1) We did not create ourselves.
(2) We do not preserve or uphold ourselves in life or being (Act 17:28; Jam 1:17). On these accounts, then, we are not our own, but the property of God.
2. Ye are bought with a price. But if we were originally Gods property, what need was there to buy us?
(1) We had become ruined debtors, enslaved captives, and guilty criminals. We had sold ourselves into slavery; we had committed sins, and thereby exposed ourselves to condemnation and wrath.
(2) The purchasers were, the Father, who gave His Son (Joh 3:16; Rom 8:32), the Son, who gave Himself.
(2) In reference to the price paid, we may observe, He gave His riches (1Co 8:9), His honour, His liberty, His life (Php 2:6-8). In a word, He purchased the Church with His own blood (Act 20:28). All mankind are here concerned, all being redeemed (1Ti 2:6; 2Co 5:14-15; Heb 2:9), and hence are not their own, much less the worlds; least of all, the devils. The people of God are here especially meant, who, in a peculiar sense, are not their own, but the temples of God (verses 13-20; 1Co 3:17-23).
II. An exhortation to duty grounded thereon. The end God had in view in purchasing us was that we might glorify Him (1Pe 2:9). We must glorify God–
1. In our body, by temperance, purity, self-denial (verse 13), and bringing it into His house, and consecrating it to Him as His temple to be kept holy.
2. In our spirit.
(1) By humility: considering that we have nothing which we have not received, and which has not been forfeited by sin.
(2) By gratitude; He has given us all back again with great advantage.
(3) By love.
(4) By resignation; if we be His, may He not do what He will with His own?
(5) By obedience; implying subjection to His will, and devotedness to His glory.
Conclusion: Note–
1. The real nature and great evil of sin. It is not only disobedience and ingratitude, but robbery of the worst kind.
2. The amazing worth of the soul of man, which, after it was enslaved, was ransomed at so great a price.
3. The great and inexcusable guilt of those who, after all this, still will perish.
4. The great encouragement we have to give ourselves to God, and employ ourselves for Him. If He bought us, He must be willing to accept, preserve, and bless us. (J. Benson.)
Full surrender to God
A friend of mine was having an earnest conversation upon the necessity of full consecration with a lady who professed to know Christ as her Saviour, but shrunk from yielding herself fully to Him. At last she said, with more outspoken honesty I am afraid titan many who mean exactly the same thing display, I dont want to give myself right over to Christ; for if I were to do so, who knows what He might do with me; for aught I know, He might send me out to China. Years had passed away when my friend received a most deeply interesting letter from this very lady, telling of how her long conflict with God had come to an end, and what happiness and peace she now felt in the complete surrender of herself to her Lord; and referring to her former conversation she said, And now I am my own no longer, I have made myself over to God without reserve, and He is sending me to China. Do you think that this lady is less happy obeying the Divine call, and working the Divine will out yonder in China, than she was when she shrunk from that will, and preferred to live a life of worldly ease and self-indulgence at home? (W. Hay Aitken.)
All our faculties should glorify God
Christians are like fire-engines at night. They carry a powerful lamp in front, which casts a light far ahead, but in no other direction, leaving the everlasting snake-train which they drag behind them enveloped in darkness. This light corresponds to the Christians hope, which casts its rays heavenward, but leaves the long train of bodily appetites and necessities which go with him through life unilluminated. Men regard their worldly business and their family duties as distinct from their religion. They carry the light of hope on their brow, and that is what they call their religion; whereas, I understand religion to be this: the right carriage of body and soul, all together. I understand that no man is living a Christian life who is not a Christian in the world, in the family, in the Church, in his mind, in his soul, in the emotions and appetites of his nature, in his hand, in his foot, in his head–who is not a Christian everywhere, and in everything in him. To take every faculty or power God has given you, and bring it under Divine influences, and make it act right–that is being a Christian; and all partialisms, by just so much as they are partialisms, are, therefore, misunderstandings or misappropriations of Christian truth. (H. W. Beecher.)
Therefore glorify God in your body.—
Glorify God
The phrase does not mean merely not to dishonour Him: it means to display positively in the use of our body the glory and especially the holiness of the heavenly Master who has taken possession of our person. Man has lost, in whole or in part, since his fall, the feeling which was, so to speak, the guardian of his body, that of natural modesty. Faith restores to it a more elevated guardian–self-respect as being brought by Christ the organ of the Spirit and temple of God. This is modesty henceforth raised to the height of holiness. (Prof. Godet.)
How God is glorified in the body
Real Christians are prepared to glorify God, for they are new creatures and temples of the Holy Ghost. And it is under the influence of that Holy Spirit working in them both to will and to do that they are to glorify God their Saviour.
I. By subjecting the body to His law. It is essential both to genuine piety and the Divine glory, that what we do should be not only what is required by the commandments of God, but also that it be done from a regard to His authority. A consideration which robs thousands of all their pretensions to excellence! Men are easily satisfied with themselves. They look no further than their conduct. If that is good, they concern not themselves about the Divine will and glory. And as the design of glorifying God, and a regard to His will and authority in prosecuting or fulfilling that design, are necessary if we would glorify Him indeed, so further in our regard to His will we must beware lest we mistake that will. The things by which God is glorified are the things which He requires. When, however, we combine the things which have been mentioned, when we aim at His glory, when we regard His will, and when we indeed do it, and all this from the conviction that we are not our own but His, then, in the most ordinary acts, we glorify Him indeed, we do that by which He esteems Himself glorified, we please Him. Let these things be combined then, and under their joint influence present your bodies a living sacrifice to God, and this will be a holy, acceptable, and reasonable service. And remember that the more promptitude and pleasure and zeal you show in yielding your bodies unto God the more you shall honour Him. Let not your backwardness in presenting your bodies unto God betray any want of love and gratitude and honour. The more abundantly these bodies labour the greater readiness you manifest to spend and be spent, to magnify Christ in your bodies, whether by life or by death, the greater pleasure you take in your infirmities for Christs sake, the more do you show your love to the Redeemer, and the more do you glorify Him in your bodies.
II. By yielding it to his correction. Christians should endeavour to glorify God as well by suffering affliction as by obedience. And they should aim at glorifying Him, not only by patience, by fortitude, by resignation, by acquiescence, and by thankfulness; but as all affliction is sent for the purposes of improvement, by humbling themselves before Him, by inquiring wherefore the Lord contendeth with them, by putting away their iniquities, and by giving their hearts and devoting their lives unreservedly to His will. But the sufferings by which Christ is most glorified in the body are those which we have to endure for His names sake. When we are persecuted for righteousness sake, and glory in tribulation, and esteem the reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures of the world, when all afflictions, and persecutions for Christs sake, instead of depressing our spirits give wings to our souls by which we mount up higher and higher in heavenliness of mind and of character, then, truly, we glorify God in our bodies, and may adopt the words of the apostle, As unknown and yet well known, as dying, and behold we live, &c. The last act by which Christ is glorified in the body is the act of dying. And oh! who can behold a believer walking through the valley of the shadow of death without seeing that God is glorified? (M. Jackson.)
Glorify God in your body
Easter is a season which emphatically belongs to the body.
I. We do well, therefore, to give some thoughts to the body–for, do we not treat religion as consisting almost entirely of thoughts and feelings? and so we exalt the soul to the disparagement of the body. And yet I know nothing which you can say of the soul which you cannot also predicate of the body. Was the soul formed in the image of God? So was the body. No distinction is made in the narrative. Is the soul redeemed? So is the body. Did Jesus address Himself to the soul? Did He not equally to the body? How careful He was after His resurrection to identify His body. He ascended and will come again in His body. And at the last day the body is the leading feature of Pauls picture. Such honour does God give everywhere to the body.
II. How can we glorify God in our bodies?
1. Generally. We should treat our body as something given us to enjoy and use for God. A part of our likeness to Christ; a part of our present being given us here to train for the services which it is to render in heaven. Such being, then, the body, we should pray about our bodies as much as about our souls. We should consecrate it in the morning to God, and deal with it all day long as a very sacred thing. You remember what St. Paul said about his body–I keep under my body, &c.
2. In detail.
(1) In the Old Testament very great stress indeed was laid on the keeping of the body very clean; and even in the New Testament we have it united almost as one with faith and conscience and truth (Heb 10:22). And more than many people think a clean body is a help to purity of heart. We are bound to take care of the health of the body, for it is Gods body; and we all know how greatly even a little disease of the body can disturb even our peace and joy, and faith, as illness stops work, and gives sorrow and expense to others. Therefore we should try to glorify God by the health of our body.
(2) There is not a part of our frame which may not be the embodiment of spiritual things of the means for religious service. When I comb my hair the very hairs remind me that they are all numbered. And the eyes, are they not inlets where-with I may first take into my very heart all the beautiful works of God in nature, and providence, and grace? And then by bright and loving looks spread peace and happiness. How much of Satan, how much of Christ there may be in the look of the eye. And the mouth! What action the mouth has for sin and self-indulgence, or self-denial and careful moderation for Christs sake. And more than you are aware the mouth is the index of temper or of sweetness. Take care of your mouth. Glorify God with it. And the tongue! What a curse or a blessing it may be! And your ear! Learn when to shut it and when to open it. And your nerves. They are very good servants, but very bad masters. Take care of them. Pray constantly for more calmness. And all the senses–consecrate them. They are the Lords. And all your members! Those hands, let them be busy, useful hands. And those knees. Let them fulfil the great design for which God gave you knees. And the feet shod with the preparation of the gospel of peace. And your whole body! Keep every part of it for God. (J. Vaughan, M. A.)
Glorifying God
The motive to the duty set before us in this passage is the most solemn in the whole sum of human thought. Ye are bought with a price, says the apostle; therefore glorify God in your body, and in your spirit, which are Gods. But how are we to fulfil this duty?
1. To glorify God is to think of God. It is evident that all human actions commence in the mind of men. The mind, under some impulse or motive, moves and then the man moves. For every act is, at first, a thought. From thence come the various actions of men pertaining to their fellows, and the other actions also which refer to God. We often say that some men do not think, but it is evident that if they did not think they would not act. But everybody does think. Men think about life and society, about dress and manners, about literature and science, about history and politics. But the great fault of man is that the range of his thought is temporal and carnal. He has but the fewest flights toward the heavens. And this is a great sin. Nothing can be more evident than the guilt of shutting out from the mind the grandest Being and the noblest idea which can reach the intellect–thought of the Infinite and Eternal One. Its sinfulness shows itself by a lower but similar transgression. What would you think of a child who lived day by day under the blessedness and the loving care of a devoted parent, and yet from design and purpose passed by that parent, day by day, year by year, and determinedly shut him out from all thought and consideration? First observe that a large portion of our fellow-creatures drop God from their thought, passively, through neglect, without intention, with no set and formal purpose to dishonour Him, but carelessly and indifferently. But another class of men set God aside purposely and deliberately. They will not have the idea of God present in their minds. They will not let the things of God circle their brains, stimulate their lives, or influence their conduct. But to think carelessly of God is neglect; to think reluctantly of Him is vicious; to think angrily and repulsively of Him is monstrous, and amounts to abomination and ruin. To glorify God, then, implies as the very first thing that we think of Him. We are to begin by opening the mind, and craving the entrance therein of the thoughts of the Eternal. To think of God aright is to take Him, formally and solemnly, and put Him before the mind, and then to contemplate Him before and behind, in the depths and in the heights, in His attributes, in His decrees, in His covenants, in the great salvation of His Son, with reverence, with awe, with humility. This it is to think of God. This is the root idea of glorifying God. But this is not enough–it is only the beginning.
2. To glorify God is to take the convictions which come from right thinking and to turn them into aspirations. This is the next step toward honouring the Maker. We must not suffer thought to become bedridden in the soul. Few things are more injurious to the mind than that passive contemplation which fails to run out into active desires or stimulated hope. It will do no good for us to think about God if such thought is not used as a means to an end, but it will do us harm. It will make us insensible. It will make us irreverent. The insensibility will be the direct result of handling an awful and majestic idea without a spiritual purpose. The irreverence will come from taking liberties with the Divine name, perchance, for mere speculation. Thought concerning God, then, is legitimate when it tends to the elevation of the soul to a higher plane of being. To think, merely to think, would be somewhat as for a river to flow from its source, and then to flow back again to its original spring. It may be assumed as a principle of our being that all our acts, internal or external, are only then healthy and genuine when they reach forward to something beyond and nobler than themselves. We see this in nature. The illumination of the sun is not self-exhausted. It comes down to earth with vivifying fructification, diffusing life, and health, and joyous animation in all things and in all creatures. And that is its beneficence and its glory. The analogy is most exact with regard to the soul. Thinking about God is not the end of God-thinking. Thinking of God is the most glorious of all means to a nobler end, that is, the glory of God. When it is mere thinking–albeit God is the object of thought–it is, nevertheless, mere speculation on God. And mere speculation, as such, concerning God has no more value than speculation concerning a mountain or a mine. Never, perhaps, in the history of Gods Church was there a man who thought so much, so deeply, so continually of God as David did. It was the occupation of his life. What was the result of this habit? What fruit sprung from this constant meditation concerning God? One single paragraph from the writings of David will show you. Like as the hart desireth the water brooks, so longeth my soul after Thee, O God. My soul is athirst for God, yea, even for the living God. And here I return directly to the point from which I have slightly departed. Take the convictions which come from right thinking, and turn them, as David did, into heavenly aspirations. Meditate constantly on the character of God. Bring His loving and majestic attributes vividly before you. You see, for instance, that God is good. Take, then, the fact, that is the goodness of God, out of the domain of thought, and make it an aspiration of your soul. Strive after goodness–Gods goodness, as a personal possession, and run along the lines of excellence and moral beauty for the fashioning of your inner and your outer life. Take the purity of God as an object of admiration. Bring it down from the sphere of speculation, and then send it up to the throne of God–a living flame of desire for your own personal purity in body, mind, and spirit. Think of the righteousness of God! Hear it in the stern accents of Mount Sinai, in the thunders of the Law! Hear it in the expiatory plaints of sacrificed animals; see it in their flowing blood! Take the love of God. You can if you choose look at it as a distant object of thought and contemplation. But I exhort you to covet the spirit of love as your own personal possession. Indeed there is not a phase of the Divine existence, not an attribute of God, not a decree, not a commandment, however abstract it may be, but that, with the aid of the Spirit, may be fused with heat and fire from above, and become changed in our pure souls into burning desires and heavenly aspirations.
3. To glorify God is to realise the aspirations of the soul into the activities of life. This is practical religion; it answers the requirements of our blessed Lord that we do His commandments. And there can be no true religion without this habit of outward obedience. Mere conviction of the brain, or mere spiritual aspiration, separate from conduct, are each, or both together, insufficient. We must do Gods holy will. Just this test is laid down by our blessed Saviour–If ye love Me keep My commandments. To talk of how we feel, or what we think concerning Christ, is an idle tale. No, what our Lord desires is something which has passed out and beyond mere human conceit into actual living reality. Did you ever think of that word reality? of its full meaning, of its mighty import, of its wide scope and bearing? Reality! that is religion made personal in the Christian life, act, word, conduct, and bearing of living disciples. I beg to commend the apostles injunction to your earnest consideration. The master end of existence, whether in angel or in man, is the glory of God. Anything below this end is a ruinous and insulting prostitution of powers. (A. Crummell.)
Glorifying God with the body
(childrens sermon):–Mans chief end is to glorify God and to enjoy Him for ever. Look at my watch. It may be used for many ends–as a mere ornament, &c.; but its chief end is to tell what oclock it is. What have you got your body for? God says, Use it for Me. If you were to get a pound from your father or master, you would naturally ask, What am I to do with it? and you would know what was meant if he said, Use it for me in such a way as to please me.
I. Why am I to glorify God in my body?
1. Because He made it, and made it for Himself. When you have made a thing for yourself, you feel that you have the best right to it. If it were taken away from you, or turned against you, would you not think it very hard? During the French Revolution the guillotine was invented, and the first man who suffered by it was the man who invented it. Perhaps some one will say, It was just what he deserved. But suppose it had been some contrivance for saving life. If that were turned against the man who designed it, or discovered it, would not every right-minded person cry shame? And who made that body of yours? The cleverest man in the world could not make it. None could make it but God. God made that hand of yours for His own use. Is it not a sin and a shame to turn it against Him? Take any book you are reading, and you will see on it the names of five people who were concerned in the making of it. On the title-page is the name of the man who wrote it; at the foot of the page, the name of the man who published it; on the other side of the page, or at the end of the book, the name of the man who printed it; on a little label inside the board at the end, the name of the man who bound it; and on another, inside the board at the beginning, the man of the man who sold it. All these get credit for what they have done. Every sheet of paper I write on has the water-mark, as it is called, with the name of the man who made it. The very buttons on my clothes bear the name of their maker. And we all feel it quite right that it should be so. But it does not always need the name. Some people can take up a piece of cloth, and say, this is so and sos make, or a picture, and say, that is such and such a painters piece, or a book, and say, this is written by such a man, I know by its style. And do we need any kind of mark or stamp on our body to tell us who made it? No. See that wonderful tubular bridge which stretches from Wales to Anglesea, and you will hear of its maker–Stephenson, the great engineer: it glorifies him. See St. Pauls Cathedral, and people will tell you of its great architect, Sir Christopher Wren: it glorifies him. Go to the National Gallery, and the artists work, in each case, may be said to glorify him. And shall I not seek to glorify God with my body? (Exo 4:11; Psa 94:9; Pro 20:12).
2. Because He sustains it. Suppose your father were to take some poor sick beggar-boy off the street into his house–to nurse him, and to feed him, and to do everything to make him well and strong. What would you think if that boy were to forget your father? Take a stranger dog into your house, and feed it, and be kind to it, and before a fortnight is over, it will follow you everywhere. What would you think if your dog left you every morning whenever he got his breakfast, and ran after every strange boy on the street, and would not follow you, and only come in to his meals? Now God does all for your body that you do for your dog. And again I ask, may it not well be used for Him in such a way as He wishes?
3. Because He has redeemed it. Our body, like everything else about us, was forfeited; just like a thing that has been put in pawn. Is is no longer ours. It has meanwhile become the property of another. And it must be redeemed. And Jesus bought back our body, paid the price of His own blood for it, and so made it His owns. Let me again ask how you judge of things that you have bought, your knife, &c., which you have saved your pocket-money to buy. You say of any of these, as you said of the money that bought it, it is my very own. I may lend these things or give the use of them to others, but none has a right to them like me. In the days of slavery, when one had bought a slave, he regarded that mans body, and all that the body could do, as his. You remember the story of the ransomed slave whom a British merchant purchased at a great price and then set free–how the liberated slave clung to his purchaser, and followed him wherever he went, and served him as no other did or could, telling, whenever he was asked the reason, He redeemed me! He redeemed me! Gratitude and love bound him, and made him, what I might call, in opposition to a bondman–a free slave. Now that is what Jesus has done; He has bought us, not with His money, but with His life. He has bought us and set us free. And we are His free slaves.
II. How am I to glorify God in my body? I claim–
1. Your hands for God. You have no right to use them in the service of Satan, the world, or sin. Idle hands do not glorify God, nor mischievous hands, nor dirty hands, nor dishonest hands, nor unkind hands, nor careless hands.
2. Your feet. They should go only on His errands. When I see the little feet kicking or stamping in passion, or venturing into forbidden and dangerous paths, or loitering when they should make haste, I cannot help thinking: These feet are not for God. How beautiful are the feet, when they are for God!
3. Your lips. What shall I say of profane words, untruthful words, coarse and vulgar words, angry and irritating words, unholy and impure words, light and jesting words, slandering and gossiping words? When we are going to speak of any one, it has been said there are three questions which it is well to ask–Is it true? Is it useful? Is it kind?
4. And so with the whole body. The ears should be for God, listening to nothing of which He would disapprove; and the eyes, turning away from all that He would not look upon. All should be for God. Whether ye eat or drink, &c. And how is all this to be? The root of all lies in having the heart for God. (J. H. Wilson.)
Our bodies should glorify God
The employment of the parable may be traced, says Dr. Wright, to Hillel, the great rabbi, who died a few years before the Christian era. In the Midrash on Lev 25:39, it is related that his scholars asked Hillel one day where he was going. To perform a commandment, answered the rabbi. What special commandment? asked the disciples. To bathe myself in the bathhouse, said Hillel. Is that one of the commandments? inquired they. Certainly, rejoined Hillel; if the statues of kings placed in the theatres and circuses have to be kept clean and washed, how much more ought I not to keep my body clean, since I have been created in the image of God?
And in your spirit.—
How God is glorified in the spirit
I. When the understanding comprehends His character. Total ignorance of His character, by implying contempt; partial ignorance of it, by implying neglect; and correct, but unoperative views of it, by implying enmity; all dishonour God. It is only when the views are both sound and practical, when the understanding is enlightened by the eternal Spirit, that we are able so to comprehend the things that belong to our peace, as to glorify God in our spirits.
II. When the conscience acknowledges His authority. Whatever we may know of God, we dishonour Him, unless conscience be influenced by what we know; for all knowledge which God imparts has a direct reference to conscience, and addresses it in the most energetic terms. But when conscience moves and actuates you in all things, and is itself moved and actuated by God; re-echoes the voice of God addressing the soul on all that is great and tender, interesting and alarming, abasing and exalting, and hears and feels every word as the word of supreme authority, with reverence and submission–then the spirit glorifies God!
III. When the affections embrace His Word. What spiritual eye can see men poor in spirit, and heirs of the kingdom, meek and inheriting the earth, hungering and thirsting after righteousness, and filled with the Spirit; merciful, and monuments of mercy; pure in heart, and hoping to see God; persecuted for righteousness sake, and anticipating glory and honour; reviled and persecuted, and all manner of evil spoken against them falsely for Christs sake; and exceeding glad of this–who can behold them as the salt of the earth, as the light of the world, and remember it is the Word of God which is the instrument of all this excellence, without knowing and feeling that the giver of every good and of every perfect gift is glorified in their spirits?
IV. When the will submits to His law. This is the love of God, that we keep His commandments. Who can imagine that God is to be glorified in the spirit while the will opposes Him? But let us not forget that every human will is opposed to God till renewed by grace, and that after it has been renewed it is still rebellious. The most advanced Christian has to complain, When I would do good, evil is present with me. God only can hold us up. And when He is pleased in tender mercy to work in us both to will and to do; to enable us to choose His commandments as the rule of our life, and to give us grace to obey them; we are then the workmanship of God, created in Christ Jesus unto good works: and all the honouring of God, which is implied in the relinquishment of our own will, and in the adoption of His, we cordially offer to Him; and others, seeing our good works, glorify our Father who is in heaven. (M. Jackson.)
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Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 19. Your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost] What an astonishing saying is this! As truly as the living God dwelt in the Mosaic tabernacle, and in the temple of Solomon, so truly does the Holy Ghost dwell in the souls of genuine Christians; and as the temple and all its utensils were holy, separated from all common and profane uses, and dedicated alone to the service of God, so the bodies of genuine Christians are holy, and all their members should be employed in the service of God alone.
And ye are not your own?] Ye have no right over yourselves, to dispose either of your body, or any of its members, as you may think proper or lawful; you are bound to God, and to him you are accountable.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
The apostle, 1Co 3:16, had called the church of Corinth,
the temple of God, and there made use of it to dissuade them from dissensions and divisions, because by them they defiled and destroyed the temple of God; here he calls the members of that church,
the temple of the Holy Ghost, which strongly proveth the Holy Ghost to be God: he mekes use of it here as an argument to dissuade them from the sin of fornication. Gods temple was built for his habitation upon earth, the place which he chose most to manifest himself in to his people, and for a place wherein his people were to pay him that external homage and worship, which he required of them under the law. So as the apostles calling them the temple of the Holy Ghost, both minded them of the favour God had bestowed on them, and also of that homage and duty which they with their bodies were to pay unto God; the latter they could not perform, nor hope for the former, while they lived in the practice of a sin so contrary to the will of God. Besides, he mindeth them, that their bodies were not their own, they had them of God: they had them from God by creation, and they were upheld by the daily workings of his providence in their upholding and preservation; God had not given them their bodies for this use, the body was not for fornication, as he had told them, 1Co 6:13. So as in abusing their bodies, they abused what was not their own, nor in their own power to use, as they listed to use them; but to be used only for those ends, and in that manner, that he who had given them had prescribed and directed: and in these abuses there was a kind of sacrilege; as God of old charged the Jews, Eze 16:17-19, that they had taken the jewels of his gold and his silver, to make images, and commit spiritual whoredom with them; and they had taken his meat, his fine flour, his oil, and incense to set before them, & c.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
19. What? know ye not? c.Proofthat “he that fornicates sinneth against his own body” (1Co6:18).
your bodynot “bodies.”As in 1Co 3:17, he representedthe whole company of believers (souls and bodies), that is, theChurch, as “the temple of God,” the Spirit so here, thebody of each individual of the Church is viewed as the ideal”temple of the Holy Ghost.” So Joh17:23, which proves that not only the Church, but also eachmember of it, is “the temple of the Holy Ghost.” Stillthough many the several members form one temple, the wholecollectively being that which each is in miniature individually. Justas the Jews had one temple only, so in the fullest sense allChristian churches and individual believers form one temple only.Thus “YOUR [plural]body” is distinguished here from “HISOWN [particular or individual] body” (1Co6:18). In sinning against the latter, the fornicator sins against”your (ideal) body,” that of “Christ,” whose”members your bodies” are (1Co6:15). In this consists the sin of fornication, that it is asacrilegious desecration of God’s temple to profane uses. The unseen,but much more efficient, Spirit of God in the spiritual temple nowtakes the place of the visible Shekinah in the old material temple.The whole man is the temple; the soul is the inmost shrine; theunderstanding and heart, the holy place; and the body, the porch andexterior of the edifice. Chastity is the guardian of the temple toprevent anything unclean entering which might provoke the indwellingGod to abandon it as defiled [TERTULLIAN,On the Apparel of Women]. None but God can claim a temple;here the Holy Ghost is assigned one; therefore the Holy Ghost is God.
not your ownThefornicator treats his body as if it were “his own,” to giveto a harlot if he pleases (1Co6:18; compare 1Co 6:20).But we have no right to alienate our body which is the Lord’s. Inancient servitude the person of the servant was wholly the propertyof the master, not his own. Purchase was one of the ways ofacquiring a slave. Man has sold himself to sin (1Ki 21:20;Rom 7:14). Christ buys him toHimself, to serve Him (Ro6:16-22).
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
What? know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost,…. What is said in 1Co 3:16 of the saints in general, is here said of their bodies in particular. The Holy Spirit, in regeneration and sanctification, when he begins the good work of grace on a man, takes possession of his whole person, soul and body, and dwells therein as in his temple. So the Jews o call the body of a righteous man , the “habitation” of the Holy Spirit. Now it is most abominably scandalous and shameful that that body, which is the dwelling place of the Holy Spirit, which is sacred to him as a temple, should be defiled by the sin of fornication: it is added,
which is in you, which ye have of God; meaning the Holy Spirit which was in them, as in his temple; which dwelt in their hearts, and influenced their bodies, lives, and conversations; and which they received of God as a wonderful instance of his grace and love to them; that he should be bestowed upon them, to regenerate, renew, and sanctify them, to implant every grace, to make them a fit habitation for God, and meet for the inheritance of the saints in light:
and ye are not your own: their own masters, at their own dispose, to live to their own lusts, or the lusts of men; men have not power over their bodies to abuse them at pleasure by fornication, or such like uncleanness, neither single nor married persons; see 1Co 7:4 and of all men, not the saints, who are neither their own nor other men’s, nor Satan’s, but God’s; not only by creation, but by choice and covenant; and Christ’s by gift, by purchase, and powerful grace, and in a conjugal relation to him; wherefore fornication ill becomes them.
o R. Joseph Albo. apud Pocock. Not. in Pert. Mosis, p. 120, 121.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Your body is a temple ( ). A sanctuary as in 3:16 which see. Our spirits dwell in our bodies and the Holy Spirit dwells in our spirits. Some of the Gnostics split hairs between the sins of the body and fellowship with God in the spirit. Paul will have none of this subterfuge. One’s body is the very shrine for the Holy Spirit. In Corinth was the temple to Aphrodite in which fornication was regarded as consecration instead of desecration. Prostitutes were there as priestesses of Aphrodite, to help men worship the goddess by fornication.
Ye are not your own ( ). Predicate genitive. Ye do not belong to yourselves, even if you could commit fornication without personal contamination or self-violation. Christianity makes unchastity dishonour in both sexes. There is no double standard of morality. Paul’s plea here is primarily to men to be clean as members of Christ’s body.
Fuente: Robertson’s Word Pictures in the New Testament
Temple [] . Better, as Rev., in margin, sanctuary. It is not only a temple, but the very shrine. See on ch. 1Co 3:16.
Glorify. See on Joh 7:39. Omit and in your spirit, which are God ‘s.
Fuente: Vincent’s Word Studies in the New Testament
1) What? know ye not. (he ouk oidate) or do you not perceive, realize, or comprehend.
2) That your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost. (hoti to soma humon) that the fleshly body of you (naos tou en humin hagiou pneumatos estin) a temple like shrine it is or an abode of the Holy Spirit – dont you realize this?
3) Which is in you. (Greek en humin) (which) is in or indwelling each of you.
4) Which ye have of God, (ou echete apo theou)which ye have or hold from God, the trinity. The person of the Holy Spirit, third person of the Godhead indwells every believer in Jesus Christ, Rom 8:9; Rom 8:11; Rom 8:14; 1Jn 4:13.
5) And ye are not your own. (kai ouk este heauton) and ye are not of yourselves. This means your salvation is not of your own origin, good nature, or good works, nor do you selfishly belong to yourself. This fact of Christian experience should excite holy living and service of gratitude from every church member.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
19. Know ye not that your body He makes use of two additional arguments, in order to deter us from this filthiness. First, That our bodies are temples of the Spirit; and, secondly, that the Lord has bought us to himself as his property. There is an emphasis implied in the term temple; for as the Spirit of God cannot take up his abode in a place that is profane, we do not give him a habitation otherwise than by consecrating ourselves to him as temples It is a great honor that God confers upon us when he desires to dwell in us. (Psa 132:14.) Hence we ought so much the more to fear, lest he should depart from us, offended by our sacrilegious actings. (363)
And ye are not your own. Here we have a second argument — that we are not at our own disposal, that we should live according to our own pleasure. He proves this from the fact that the Lord has purchased us for himself, by paying the price of our redemption. There is a similar statement in Rom 14:9
To this end Christ died and rose again, that he might be Lord of the living and the dead.
Now the word rendered price may be taken in two ways; either simply, as we commonly say of anything that it has cost a price, (364) when we mean that it has not been got for nothing; or, as used instead of the adverb τιμίως at a dear rate, as we are accustomed to say of things that have cost us much. This latter view pleases me better. In the same way Peter says,
Ye are redeemed, not with gold and silver, but with the precious (365) blood of the Lamb, without spot. (1Pe 1:18.)
The sum is this, (366) that redemption must hold us bound, and with a bridle of obedience restrain the lasciviousness of our flesh.
(363) “ Par nos vilenies plenes de sacrilege;” — “By our defilements, full of sacrilege.”
(364) Thus, ἐξευρίσκειν, is employed by classical writers to mean — getting a thing at a price, that is, at a high price. See Herod. 7. 119. — Ed
(365) Our Author has very manifestly in his eye the epithet τιμίος, (precious,) as made use of by the Apostle Peter, in reference to the blood of Christ — τιμίῳ αἱματι, ὡς ἀμνου ἀμώμου κ. τ. λ. — “precious blood, as of a Lamb without blemish,” etc. — Ed
(366) “ Le sommaire et la substance du propos revient la;” — “The sum and substance of the discourse amount to this.”
Fuente: Calvin’s Complete Commentary
(19, 20) What? know ye not . . .?These verses read better rendered thus: Do you not know that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you? Which you have from God, and you are not your own. For you were bought with a price. Glorify God then in your body.
There are two reasons why we are not our own. (1) The Spirit which has possession of our bodies is not our own, but given us of God. (2) We have been bought with a price, even the blood of Christ; it is a completed purchase (1Pe. 1:18-19). Our bodies not being our own to do as we like with, we have no right to give them over unto sin. The last words of the verse are not a cold logical deduction from the previous argument, but rather an earnest exhortation suggested by the solemn thought of our oneness with Christ, and the price paid by Him to make us His.
The words and in your spirits, which are in the Authorised version, are not in the older Greek MSS. They were probably added to give a kind of verbal completeness to the exhortation. They only tend, however, to weaken the force of the passage as St. Paul wrote it. The dignity of the body is the subject of the previous passage, and the necessity for its purity the sole theme of the entire argument.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
19. What! A term of indignant surprise at his Corinthians not having realized this in their easiness with the fornicator.
Body Your soul is the resident of the body as its home; while the Holy Ghost consecrates it as his temple. Materialistic philosophers of the present day have reproached Christianity with endeavouring, in its effort for exalting the soul, to depreciate the real worth and dignity of the body. Popish monasticism has, indeed, done so. The macerations, and flagellations, and other cruelties inflicted by Romish monkery on the body of its devotees are not drawn from the New Testament, but borrowed from the Buddhisms and Brahmanisms of the East. On the contrary, true Christianity, by its doctrines of the incarnation and resurrection, puts an honour upon the body of which materialistic philosophy knows nothing.
Not your own Ye walk on earth as beings belonging to the holy God, pervaded by his indwelling Spirit.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
‘Or do you not know that your body is a sanctuary of the Holy Spirit which is in you, which you have from God, and you are not your own, for you were bought with a price. Therefore glorify God in your body.’
Now he expresses his incredulity that a Christian should forget his unique position in Christ. Are Christians not aware that they are each a sanctuary of the Holy Spirit? The sin of sexual uncleanness is made even more severe in view of the fact that the Holy Spirit dwells in us, the Holy Spirit Whom God has given us, and that we are His temple, and each His sanctuary. Thus we are each made holy (1Co 3:17). How then can we defile His sanctuary by uniting it with an idolatrous prostitute or with sexual uncleanness? Note how carefully he makes each sanctuary individual. The fornicator does not defile the whole temple, he defiles himself as one of the sanctuaries of the Holy Spirit.
This is similar to the idea in the previous verse where his body is defiled without contaminating the body of Christ. The defilement robs God, but does not defile God. It does however defile what belongs to Him.
And that is one further thing that we are to remember, that we no longer belong to ourselves. We have been bought with a price. We now belong to Him by purchase. 1Co 7:23 may be seen as suggesting that the prime idea here is that we have been bought by God from sin in the slave market, and are thus now His bondservants. Others see it as suggesting that just as a slave who has been ‘bought by a god’ in order to set him free (a legal fiction) is seen as belonging to that god, so we too belong to the living God. But in our case He lives, and we are therefore really His, and we are responsible to Him as our Master. How then can we take what is His and use it in this dreadful way? We have no right. It is His body.
A third possibility is that slavery is not in mind at all and that the thought is that the sanctuary has been bought for its holy purpose at a great price. There is no thought of slavery in the context (whereas in 1Co 7:23 that is the context). The emphasis is on the buying and the price, the former stressing God’s ownership, the latter stressing how much the purchase cost God in the death of His Son (1Pe 1:18-19). And the context is of a sanctuary of God. This would tie in with the fact that we are a part of God’s building (1Co 3:9), a part of the whole larger Sanctuary of God, the church of believers (1Co 3:16).
So the argument against immorality has revealed the positive side for the Christian. We are members of His body and will be raised by the power of God to be with Him, we are one spirit with the Lord, bound in the closest of unions, we are sanctuaries of the Holy Spirit Who dwells within us, Who was given to us by God, and we are bought with a price, the most precious price that was ever paid, the blood of Christ as of a Lamb without blemish and without spot (1Co 5:7; 1Pe 1:18-19), a contract sealed by the indwelling of the Holy Spirit (Eph 1:13-14; Eph 4:30). How then can we behave contrary to God’s will and defile what we have contribute to Him?
We note here how Paul is also demolishing the doctrine that the body has no connection with the heavenly and will therefore be done away. He has firmly put the body within the heavenly. The body as well as the spirit has been redeemed. Thus all teaching that the body does not matter is done away with. What we do in the body does matter. (Pneumatics had probably argued that as we are to leave our bodies what our bodies do does not matter).
‘Therefore glorify God in your body.’ What else can we do? Away sin, away evil, away immorality, for we in our bodies are His and His for ever. Thus our bodies must ever bring glory to God.
Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett
1Co 6:19. What! know ye not, &c. This question is repeated six times in this chapter, and seems to carry with it a very strong irony on their pretence to extraordinary wisdom. See ch. 1Co 4:10. Locke, Wetstein, and Cicero de Leg. lib. 1: ad fin.
Inferences.How great a reproach do we bring on our Christian profession by so immoderate an attachment to our secular interests! How much does the family of our common Father suffer, while brother goes to law with brother!What are these little interests of mortal life, that the heirs of salvation, by whom angels are to be judged, should wrangle about them, and for the sake of them do wrong, and that even to their brethren! 1Co 6:1-8. Men had need, where such a temper prevails, to examine themselves, and take heed that they be not deceived; for though good men may fall into some degrees of this evil, through negligence, mistake, or the infirmities of our common nature; yet certainly it looks too much like the character of those, concerning whom the Apostle testifies that they should not inherit the kingdom of God, 1Co 6:9-10.
We may observe, that in the catalogue here given are contained, not only the most infamous and enormous offenders, but some who perhaps may be tempted, because of their freedom from flagitious crimes, to think much better of themselves than they ought. We find here the effeminate and covetous, the revilers and extortioners, ranked with adulterers and fornicators, with thieves and drunkards, with idolaters and sodomites. We can never be secure from danger of falling into the greatest sins, till we learn to guard against the least; or rather till we think no evil small, viewing every sin in its contradiction to the nature of God, and in the sad aspect that it wears with regard to an eternal state.
But how striking is it to reflect, that when the Apostle is speaking of persons of such infamous character, he should be able to add, in his address to his Christian brethren at Corinth, (1Co 6:11.) and such were some of you! Who must not adore the riches of divine grace?Were such as these the best of the heathen world?Were such as these prepared by their distinguished virtues to receive further assistance?Let us pay our homage to the all-conquering grace of God; and let the greatest sinners hence learn not to despair of salvation, when made sincerely desirous of being washed and sanctified, as well as justified in the name of our Lord Jesus, and by the Spirit of our God.
It is that Name, it is that Spirit alone, which accomplishes wonders like these; and, blessed be God, all the wonders of this kind were not exhausted in those early ages; but some have been reserved for us, on whom the end of the world is come. The Gospel has had its triumphs in our own days, and they shall be renewed in those of our children: only let none hence presume to turn the grace of God into wantonness, lest, instead of being among those who are made trophies of the divine mercy, they should perish with the multitude of the ungodly world.
With what incomparable advantages does our holy religion, in this respect peculiarly excellent, enforce all the lessons of moral virtue which it teaches!With what holy disdain should we look on the baits of sense, and the pollutions which are in the world through lust, if we seriously and often reflected on these two things,that our bodies are the members of Christ, and that they are the temples of the Holy Ghost!It should be our unwearied care, as it will be our peculiar happiness, that they may not only nominally, but really be such; that by a living faith we may be united to the Lord, so as to become one Spirit with him, animated by that Spirit which resides in him, and dwells in all who are truly his, 1Co 6:15-19.
Whenever we are tempted to alienate ourselves from the service of God, we should reflect upon the price with which we are bought; 1Co 6:20.That great, that important price, which we should never think of, but with secret shame, as well as with love and admiration. O Lord! hast thou paid such a ransom for me, and shall I act as if I thought even this not enough?as if thou hadst acquired only a partial and imperfect right to me, and I might divide myself between thee and strangers, between thee and thine enemies?Oh may I be entirely thine, and make it the business of the latest day and hour of my life, to glorify thee with my body, and with my spirit, which are, and ought to be, for ever thine!
REFLECTIONS.1st, The Apostle proceeds to censure another grievous abuse among them. A litigious spirit prevailed, and, to the shame of their holy profession, brother went to law against brother, and that before the unbelievers, the heathen magistrates.
1. He rebukes them for thus going to law among themselves, and that too, as appears, 1Co 6:2; 1Co 6:7 on matters of small importance, which, without great detriment to themselves or families, they might have quietly passed by, and borne the loss of, rather than seek a litigious redress: and, worst of all, they chose rather to carry their causes before the heathen tribunals, than refer them to the decision of their own members, the saints of God; thereby giving the enemy occasion to triumph in their quarrels.
2. He suggests, as an aggravation of their fault, the honour and dignity to which the saints of God must shortly be exalted, as assessors with the eternal Judge on his throne, while fallen angels and a guilty world stand at his bar, and receive from his lips their eternal doom. And if so, how strange must it be that they should not now be able to judge of the smallest matters, and determine concerning the trivial affairs of this life. (See the Annotations.)
3. With a warm expostulation on their folly and perverseness, he points out to them a remedy for the evil. I speak to your shame. In what an unbecoming and unchristian manner do you act? Is it so, that there is not a wise man among you? No, not one that shall be able to judge between his brethren? Where they boasted of such high attainments in wisdom, it would be very strange if they could not find a better umpire of their disputes among the whole body of their church, than to have recourse to Gentile tribunals. There was therefore, no doubt, a fault in this matter; and far better was it for them to suffer some wrong and loss, than to seek redress in such a way. But, instead of this meekness, patience, and forgiveness, ye do wrong, and defraud, and that your brethren, to the great dishonour of your Christian profession. Note; All differences among Christians should be amicably determined by their brethren: at least, in lesser matters, it were better to quit our right than have recourse to the wrangling bar.
2nd, The Apostle, having warned them against some particular offences, passes on to enumerate a black catalogue, of which they had formerly been guilty, and under the power of which, whoever continued to walk, he never could inherit the kingdom of God.
1. The sins mentioned are fornication, idolatry, adultery, effeminacy and lasciviousness, sodomy, theft, avarice, drunkenness, reviling, extortion, crimes which, if indulged, must necessarily exclude the soul from any part in the kingdom of grace, and for ever banish it from the presence of God in glory.
2. He warns them against all self-delusion in this matter. There was a lie in their right hand, if they flattered themselves with any vain imaginations that they had yet hope towards God, while walking in such abominations; which then, now, and for ever, if not forsaken and forgiven, must inevitably destroy both body and soul in hell.
3. He reminds them of the blessed change which had passed upon them, that they might not again return unto folly. Such were some of you. But glory be to God’s rich and boundless grace, ye are washed, but ye are sanctified, but ye are justified in the name of the Lord Jesus, and by the Spirit of our God: ye are washed in the Fountain opened for sin and uncleanness: by the atoning Blood of the adored Redeemer your iniquities are pardoned, great and aggravated as they were; and you are not only accounted righteous, but made pure in heart by the mighty operation of the Divine Spirit, and in body, soul, and spirit renewed, that you might be made meet for the inheritance among the saints in light. Note; (1.) The greatest crimes exclude none from salvation who fly to the atoning blood of Jesus. In him there is grace abounding for the chief of sinners. (2.) All who are justified by grace, are in a blessed measure sanctified by the Spirit. We deceive ourselves, if we think that we have an interest in the one, if we do not experience the effectual operation of the other. (3.) Nothing is so strong an argument to a genuine Christian to fly from sin, as the remembrance of the mercy that he has tasted, and of the ransom which has been paid.
3rdly, As some at Corinth appeared to have too light thoughts of the sin of fornication which the Apostle ranked under the damning sins, and seem to have set it on a footing only with the meats forbidden to the Gentile converts, (Act 15:29.) the Apostle strongly sets himself to shew their dangerous error. With regard to meats forbidden by the Levitical law, or offered to idols, all things are lawful unto me, which Christ has not forbidden, and are not in their own nature sinful; but all things are not expedient; even in indifferent matters, for the sake of others, it is right to forego our Christian liberty. All things are lawful for me, but I will not be brought under the power of any, so as to have my affections enslaved by them, or to have my conscience subjected to any human arbitrary authority. Meats for the belly, and the belly for meats; all wholesome food is designed for our use; but these are things of trivial consequence, since God shall shortly destroy both it and them. In the eternal world the glorified will not need these bodily refreshments, for they shall hunger no more, nor thirst any more: but respecting fornication, the matter is very different; though the belly is not at all defiled by meats, the body is by fornication.
He urges this matter by various arguments.
1. Now the body is not for fornication; it was not made to be prostituted to impurity; but for the Lord, to be employed for his glory, and the Lord for the body, who, as the bridegroom of his church and people, requires their bodies as well as souls to be under his holy government. And,
2. God hath both raised up the Lord Jesus from the dead, that his quickened body might be the pledge and earnest of our resurrection; and will also raise up us by his own power: our bodies therefore, which, if we be faithful to his grace, shall be fashioned like to his glorious body, ought not now to be polluted by fornication and uncleanness.
3. Know ye not, that your bodies are the members of Christ? Through faith we are united to Christ as our living head, and compose a part of his body mystical: shall I then take the members of Christ, and make them the members of an harlot? How horrid the very suggestion! and every Christian heart, with detestation of the thought, cannot but cry, God forbid! What, know ye not that he which is joined to an harlot, is one body? Such an unhallowed connection is most contrary to the union of the heart with Jesus: for two, saith he, shall be one flesh. A fornicator becomes united to a harlot, and not to Christ; but he that is joined unto the Lord, in real vital union of heart and person, is one spirit, actuated and influenced by the same divine Spirit, which in all its fulness dwells in our exalted head. Therefore flee fornication, as one of the highest indignities that we can offer to the Lord, of whose body we are members. Note; In temptations to lewdness, flight is often the only preservative.
4. Every other sin that a man doeth, is without the body, and terminates upon an object without himself, not immediately defiling the body, though it brings guilt upon his soul; but he that committeth fornication sinneth against his own body; not only offending against God and his neighbour, but immediately contaminating his own flesh by such an abomination.
5. What shall I farther urge? Know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you, which ye have of God? And, since he hath been pleased to take up his abode in your hearts, ye are not your own, but bound to yield yourselves to his will and guidance, and to do nothing which should provoke the divine Inhabitant to quit his temple with abhorrence.
6. For, to finish with one argument more, ye are bought with a price, even the amazing price of a Redeemer’s blood, from the curse of the law, and the bondage of corruption, that you might be restored to the service and enjoyment of the blessed God. Therefore, since this was one great end of your redemption, glorify God in your body, and in your spirit, which are God’s, nor dare to alienate your affections from him, or to dishonour your bodies by fornication, which should be employed in his blessed work, and wholly and unreservedly devoted to his glory.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
1Co 6:19 justifies the in respect of the specific description of it given by . “ Commits sin ,” I say, against his own body; or , in case ye doubt that, and think perhaps that it does not matter so much about the body, know ye not that (1) your body ( i.e. the body of each one among you, see Bernhardy, p. 60) is the temple (not: a temple , see on 1Co 3:16 ) of the Holy Spirit which is in you (Rom 8:11 ); and that (2) ye belong not to your own selves (see 1Co 6:20 )? Fornication, therefore, so far as it affects your own body, is a desecration of what is holy, and a selfish rebellion against God your Lord.
] gives edge to the proof, [1005] and leads on to the second point ( ) is under attraction from . . (Winer, p. 154 [E. T. 203]).
. . [1006] ] still dependent upon , which is to be supplied again after , not an independent statement (Hofmann, who takes the as meaning also ), which would needlessly interrupt the flow of the animated address.
[1005] Chrysostom: , , . Further, as to the idea of the body being the temple of the Holy Spirit, in opposition to the abuse of it in debauchery, comp. Herm. Past. Sim. v. 7.
[1006] . . . .
Fuente: Heinrich August Wilhelm Meyer’s New Testament Commentary
DISCOURSE: 1959
THE DUTY OF DEVOTING OURSELVES TO GOD
1Co 6:19-20. What? know ye not that ye are not your own? for ye are bought with a price: therefore glorify God in your body, and in your spirit, which are Gods.
THE word of God reveals to us many things which unenlightened reason could never have discovered. This is particularly manifest with respect to the offices of Christ and of the Holy Spirit. These were mysteries hid in God from the foundation of the world; but they are supposed to be well known to every true Christian; indeed they form the basis of the Christians hope; and they at the same time afford him his strongest motives to obedience. St. Paul was dissuading the Corinthians from the sin of fornication: he reminded them therefore of the principles which they professed. We wave what he says respecting the Spirit dwelling in them, and shall confine ourselves to the words of our text.
We shall consider,
I.
The principle which the Apostle assumes
All men naturally think they are their own
[Men employ their time and faculties nearly as they please [Note: Isa 53:6.]. They think themselves at liberty so to do [Note: Jer 23:17.]. Hence the language of their hearts is declared by the Psalmist [Note: Psa 12:4.]Their conduct, if not their speech, resembles that of Pharaoh [Note: Exo 5:2.]]
But no man is or can be his own
[Men may be free from any human yoke; but no man is or can be independent of God. This is a principle even of natural religion.]
This every Christian is supposed to know
[The manner in which the Apostle assumes this principle is remarkable. His question is a direct appeal to our consciences; he takes it for granted that no one can be ignorant of that truth; he expresses surprise that such a truth should be forgotten.]
Indeed this principle cannot admit a doubt. This appears from considering,
II.
The argument he urges in support of it
God, as our Creator, has an unalienable right over us
[We possess not a faculty of body or mind but from him [Note: 1Co 4:7.]. We cannot exercise one faculty but by virtue derived from him [Note: 2Co 3:5.]. We therefore can be no other than his property.]
But he has also redeemed us
[We were in bondage to the curse of the law [Note: Gal 3:10.], but God has redeemed us from this miserable state [Note: Gal 3:13.]. He paid no less a price for us than the blood of his own Son [Note: 1Pe 1:18-19.].]
By this he has acquired a further right over us
[The great end of redemption was that we might live unto God. The Scriptures speak of redemption in this light [Note: 1Pe 3:18. 2Co 5:14-15. Joh 17:19.]. Thus our obligation to devote ourselves unreservedly to God is greatly increased and confirmed by it. If God complain of us for requiting with neglect his paternal care [Note: Isa 1:2-3.], how much more may he, for our contempt of redeeming love!]
The principle being thus established, we proceed to consider,
III.
The exhortation he founds upon it
Our body and our spirit are entirely Gods property. We are bound therefore to glorify him with both to the uttermost
[We cannot indeed add any thing to Gods glory [Note: Psa 16:2.]. God however esteems himself glorified by our services [Note: Psa 50:23.]. There are many ways in which we may glorify him daily. A devotedness to him is justly called our reasonable service [Note: Rom 12:1.].]
Let the exhortation then have its due effect
[God claims every one of us as his own. Let us not then live as though we were at our own disposal; let us adopt the resolution of Joshua [Note: Jos 24:15.]let us yield to him all the members of our bodies [Note: Rom 6:13.]; let us glorify him with every faculty of our souls [Note: Psa 103:1.]; let us never disjoin what was so connected in Pauls experience [Note: Act 27:23.]; let us seek to have that inspired declaration fulfilled in us [Note: Rom 14:7-8.]]
Inferences
We may see from hence,
1.
What lamentable ignorance prevails in the Christian, world!
[Many are daily violating their baptismal vows without remorse. Though educated in the faith of Christ, they give not themselves to him. This may well be a matter of surprise to thoughtful minds. It justly excited the feelings of David [Note: Psa 119:53.]. Let us beg of God to convince us of the evil of such conduct; let us turn from it with self-lothing and self-abhorrence [Note: Eze 36:31.].]
2.
How reasonable and delightful is the Christians duty!
[What more reasonable than that we should be his who bought us? And what so delightful as to be ever glorifying God? This constitutes the felicity of the perfected saints and angels. We should never be unhappy here if we abounded more in this duty. Let us know, then, and enjoy our inestimable privilege. To have honoured God here, will be our crown hereafter.]
Fuente: Charles Simeon’s Horae Homileticae (Old and New Testaments)
19 What? know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you, which ye have of God, and ye are not your own?
Ver. 19. That your body is the temple ] Shall we make the temple of God the stews of Satan See 1Co 3:16 . Antiochus and Pompey never prospered after that they defiled the temple.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
19 .] Justification of the . . . above, and this by an amplification of the above , and . Your body (i.e. the body of each man among you, but put singular, to keep, as in ch. 1Co 3:16 , the unity of the idea of God’s temple, or perhaps because the body in its attributes is in question here) is the temple of (possessed by, as His residence: the temple, not a temple, see note on ch. 1Co 3:16 ) the Holy Spirit who is in you (reminiscence of the reality of His indwelling), whom ye have from God (reminiscence, whose Spirit He is, and so preparation for the following inference), and are not your own (so that ye have no right to alienate your body, not being yours ).
Fuente: Henry Alford’s Greek Testament
1Co 6:19-20 . What a deadly sin, an act of high treason, this is for the Christian, Paul’s final appeal shows: “Or (if you do not yet realise the heinousness of fornication), do you not know that your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit within you, which you have ( , gen [990] by attraction to ) from God?” The Holy Spirit dwells in the readers: how but in their body , since they are in the body? (1Co 3:16 , cf. Rom 8:11 ; also Joh 2:21 ): there is the same tacit inference from whole to part as in 1Co 6:15 ; the same assumption that the body is essential to the man, which underlies the doctrine of the Resurrection (1Co 6:15 ). The Christian estimate of is thus categorically opposed to the heathen estimate. In the temple of Aphrodit prostitutes were priestesses, and commerce with them was counted a consecration ; it is an absolute desecration of God’s true temple in the man himself. “And (that) you are not your own?” This too P. asks his readers if they “do not know?” The possessor is God , who has occupied them by His Spirit, having first purchased them with His Son’s blood: cf. 1Co 1:30 , 1Co 3:23 ; Rom 8:32 , 2Co 5:18 ff., Act 20:28 . “For you were bought at a price!” the P. does not need to state; it was (1Pe 1:18 f.; Eph 1:7 , Mat 20:28 , Rev 5:9 ). , to purchase , syn [991] with ( ) , to ransom (1Co 1:30 , Tit 2:14 ): the latter points to the means of redemption, the former to the proprietorship which it creates ( cf. , Act 20:28 ); both ideas meet in Eph 1:14 . The gen [992] of price, , indicates the value at which God rates His purchase. . . .: “Now glorify God in your body ” sc . by a chaste life (contrast Rom 2:23 ). (rare in N.T.; h. l . in P.), kindred to the temporal , makes the command peremptory, breaking off discussion ( cf. Act 13:2 ). , in , not with , your body the temple wherein each man serves as priest; here the , in Rom 12:2 the . . . . ., of the T.R., is a Syrian gloss, added as if to complete the sense; cf. 1Co 7:34 .
[990] genitive case.
[991] synonym, synonymous.
[992] genitive case.
Fuente: The Expositors Greek Testament by Robertson
the = a.
Temple. Greek. naos. See 1Co 3:16.
Holy Ghost = Holy Spirit. App-101.
of = from. App-104.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
19.] Justification of the . . . above,-and this by an amplification of the above , and . Your body (i.e. the body of each man among you, but put singular, to keep, as in ch. 1Co 3:16, the unity of the idea of Gods temple, or perhaps because the body in its attributes is in question here) is the temple of (possessed by, as His residence: the temple, not a temple, see note on ch. 1Co 3:16) the Holy Spirit who is in you (reminiscence of the reality of His indwelling), whom ye have from God (reminiscence, whose Spirit He is, and so preparation for the following inference), and are not your own (so that ye have no right to alienate your body, not being yours).
Fuente: The Greek Testament
1Co 6:19. ) a particle denoting the second part of a disjunctive interrogation. The expression, his own, 1Co 6:18, is in this ver. sweetly limited. Our body is so constituted, as that it may be the temple of God, i.e. His peculiar and perpetual habitation.- , which is in you) This expression assigns the reason [tiology.-end.]. The Holy Spirit is in you; therefore you are His temple.-) whom, the Spirit.- , and ye are not your own) This appropriately follows, but yet it is connected more closely with, ye are bought, and in its construction, it also depends on , because.
Fuente: Gnomon of the New Testament
1Co 6:19
1Co 6:19
Or know ye not that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit which is in you, which ye have from God?-The body of a Christian is a temple or a dwelling place of the Holy Spirit, it is therefore a terrible thing to make a temple of God one with a harlot. [What has before been asserted of the church as a whole (1Co 3:16) is now asserted of every member of it, and the Christians body is the most sacred thing on earth, and every dishonor to it is an insult to him who has chosen it for his dwelling place.] Three epochs are marked by the word temple. In the Old Testament it means the material temple, the sign of localized worship and a separate people (Exo 20:24; Deu 12:5; Deu 12:11; Deu 12:13-14); in the Gospels Jesus uses it of his own body (Joh 2:19-21); here it is used of every baptized believer, sanctified by the indwelling of the Holy Spirit.
and ye are not your own:-[Christians do not belong to themselves, even if they could commit fornication without personal contamination or self-violation. Christianity makes unchastity dishonor both sexes. There is no double standard of morality. The plea here is to Christians to be clean as members of Christs body.]
Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary
The Body for God
Know ye not that your body is a temple of the Holy Ghost glorify God therefore in your body.1Co 6:19-20.
St. Pauls words declare the basis on which all the fabric of specifically Christian civilization standsthe doctrine of the intrinsic sanctity of the body, bought by Christ on the cross, indwelt by the Spirit of God, commissioned to be the instrument of Gods glory.
The Apostle is denouncing sins of the flesh. In his eyes these sins are something more than sins. They are flagrant anomalies; they are monstrous wrongs. There is a direct contradiction in terms, a flat denial of the first principles of justice, in the commission of them. God has set His stamp upon us. He impressed us with His image in our first creation. He re-stamped the same image upon us when He formed us anew in Christ. Thus we are doubly His. Here is God enthroned in the sanctuary of your bodies. But youyou ignore the august Presence, you profane the Eternal Majesty; you pollute, you dishonour, you defy, with shameless sacrilege, the ineffable glory, the Lord seated on His throne, high and lifted up, His train filling the whole temple of your being, as if He were some vile and worthless thing.
There is a deep and luminous suggestiveness about St. Pauls characteristic formula, know ye not? Some have thought that the Apostle is thus recalling to the memory of his converts specific teachings of his own; but this seems unlikely. Rather he is addressing himself to their elementary Christian instincts, and bringing these into the field against the shallow and demoralizing sophistries, which had for them an attractiveness so strange and so perilous. He would thus cut his way through the thickets of futile argumentation, and bring the whole question at issue into the open, where it could be clearly seen and justly appraised. The Christian conscience would settle with prompt and peremptory decision matters which would long perplex and mislead the Christian intellect. Know ye not, he says, that your body is a temple of the Holy Ghost? glorify God, therefore, in your body.1 [Note: H. Hensley Henson.]
I
The Body
Of all the visible and tangible wonders of the universe, the human body ranks the first. It is the centre and home of all the sciences. All things, by ministering to it, unanimously consent that it is head over all. It is the throne of all laws; and comprehends every form. Only let it be added that, for the exquisiteness of its lines, it excels all forms, and surpasses everything that exists, whether in the vegetable or in the animal world. Hence one may pass for a good artist in the representation of mountains, clouds, streams, trees, and cattle; and yet have very little capacity to represent the subtle and delicate lines of the human face. The human face is the triumph of beauty. It is visible, but it expresses the wisdom, love, and grace of the invisible world. It is on the sky-line between the two worlds, where matter and spirit exquisitely blend.
1. Consider the honour of the human body.
(1) It is a bit of the handiwork of God.Men of science, whose study is in the forms of life, tell us that in these there is visible a struggle upwards through innumerable forms, but the goal of the struggle is man, the human form Divine. Contrivances which are only experiments lower down in the scale are complete in the human body, and its hundreds of different parts are compacted together into a machine so perfect that it may go sometimes for a hundred years without going wrong. But just as the flowers and plants of Eden were made originally all very good, but required the cultivating hand of Adam, and as plants and many other works of God require human culture in order to bring them to the most complete perfection, so does the body. The body requires cultivation; but is it not a splendid reason for giving it this, to remember that we are fellow-workers with God in so doing, that we are carrying out His ideals and bringing His handiwork to perfection?
In the interests of his intelligence mans mind has been sheathed in a sensitive body. Through the things that he has felt and suffered in his body he has come into the mastery of the things that made him feel and suffer, so that now they do him service. So it is with character. In the interests of his spirit mans soul has been sheathed in his body. It is given him for moral discovery, for the shaping of character. All moral greatness and moral power come first in the form of control of the body. To eat, to drink, to rest, are all of them good, but because each of them may be abused into selfishness and sin, there is moral danger in each of them. We are shaping our moral character, and are determining our moral possibilities, by our use of the body. It is the earliest arena and instrument of the spirits training. Through the body also men learn to suffer and to be strong, and through suffering to find a farther and a finer moral and spiritual beauty. It is our business to be at our physical best for Gods sakeour religious business, for the functions of life are only perfectly performed in health. But it is very easy for us to overrate the physical; and, lest we be betrayed into folly, we may remember that some of the greatest and the noblest men and women have been physical weaklings. To read their story is to understand that through their sufferings and bodily disability, they came into their nobleness, learned to consecrate suffering, and compel it to the holy ministries of spiritual culture. Through the pain and the patience of disabled years they worked out their own salvation.1 [Note: T. Yates, Sculptors of Life, 106.]
(2) The body is the indispensable instrument of the mind.The body is not a part of the mind, nor a function of the mind, as some teach in our day. The mind is not inevitably bound up with the body, as we can see by the fact that the most splendid minds have often lodged in the plainest and even the most deformed bodies. The mind is not going to go down in the dissolution of the body, but to survive the wreck of matter and the crash of worlds, and yet in many respects the mind is dependent on the body. It is through the body that it receives all its knowledge, and it is only through the members of the body that it can act on the outer world. The mind is dependent on the body for its share in all that is done beneath the circuit of the sun. Neglect of the body or ill-treatment of it may shorten life, or it may debilitate life and make it a burden to its possessor.
We have probably yet to learn how much we owe to those humble, obscure, and too often slighted friends, the senses, whether they be five or seven. Are they indeed only doors and windows, gateways of knowledge, messengers conveying intelligence to some inner, directing power, or are they in themselves as noble, as important, as any other part of man, as necessary to the soul as it is to them? Of one thing I am intimately convinced, that it is to the agency of the senses that man owes many of his sweetest feelings of affection, his loftiest aspirations after excellence. It cannot be doubted that the purest affections of the heart are closely linked with our physical nature, and fed by what ministers to its delight. Those whom we really love are as dear to us in their bodies as they are in their souls; it is to sight, hearing, contact, we greatly owe that irresistible charm which makes the presence of a person we love to be desired by the heart, above all else that life can give it. The sovereign attraction lies in what an old writer calls the continual comfort of a face, in the sound of a voice, the touch of a hand, so that we may truly say that it is presence, not absence, which is the real test of love, and that affection is better gauged by our feelings about people when we are with them, than by our thoughts about them when we are separated.1 [Note: Dora Greenwell, Liber Humanitatis, 8.]
(3) The body is the medium of expression of the soul.There are many faces about this world in which prayer and patience and humility have, by Gods grace, wrought a beauty which may be the nearest approach that can be seen in this life to the glory of the Resurrectionthe glory that is to be revealed in those who shall then be wholly penetrated and transfigured by the Spirit of the Lord. So intimate is the bond between soul and body that it has naturally come to be employed as the very type of immediate union or alliance; and the poet has illustrated that, in a well-known line, when he writes that God is very near to us: Closer is He than breathing, and nearer than hands and feet. Indeed every day we see new instances in which, owing to this indissociable connection, the soul has written its own character on the body. We are usually right in judging a man by his facial expression. His nature peeps out in the glance of his eye, the touch of his hand, the tone and inflection of his voice, his unstudied and unconscious gestures and attitudes, even the peculiarities of his gait.
Olalla, I said, the soul and the body are one, and mostly so in love. What the body chooses, the soul loves; where the body clings, the soul cleaves; body for body, soul to soul, they come together at Gods signal; and the lower part (if we can call aught low) is only the footstool and foundation of the highest.1 [Note: R. L. Stevenson, Olalla.]
There are times when, all unconsciously to itself, the soul declares what it really is, what is its true natureits love or hate, esteem or scorn. Perhaps it is some articulate utterance that is the medium of revelation, as when Browning says:
He replied
The first word I heard ever from his lips,
All himself in itan eternity
Of speech, to match the immeasurable depth
O the soul that then broke silenceI am yours.
Or, perhaps, the silence remains unbroken, but the disclosure is made, nevertheless, with
Each soul a-strain
Some one way through the fleshthe face, an evidence
O the soul at work inside.
When a man has base ends and speaks falsely, the eye is muddy, and sometimes a-squint. But when his soul is true and pure, his eye is as clear as the heavens, and his face grows one luminosity;though, in the former case, he may never suspect that the question will be put to him, Why is thy countenance fallen? And in the latter also it might truthfully be said, He wist not that the skin of his face shone.2 [Note: J. Flew, Studies in Browning, 94.]
New burnisht Joys!
Which finest Gold and Pearl excell!
Such sacred Treasures are the Limbs of Boys
In which a Soul doth dwell:
Their organized Joints and azure Veins
More Wealth include than the dead World contains.3 [Note: Traherne, Poems of Felicity, 2.]
(4) The body is a medium of Divine service.A large part of our usefulness and influence is due to passing bodily changes, of which we may be unconscious, but which others feel. Our eyes brighten with the good news we have to tell; our face beams with a smile; theres music in our very foot when we are on an errand of love. When one lifts on us the light of his countenance we learn the sacred service of the body. Love and joy, hope and fear, pleading earnestness, remonstrant indignationall the deep emotions of spiritual life lay the body under tribute. Think of the power of the orator in glance and gesture as well as in word; think of the dear faces and the musical voices of a happy household; think of beauty of expression, lovely when it animates fair features, but infinitely more touching when it glorifies a plain face. These are but casual illustrations of the various ways in which the body lends itself to the divinest ministries of life.
Charles Kingsley once said, There has always seemed to me something impious in the neglect of personal health. I could not do half the good I do, if it were not for the strength and activity some consider coarse and degrading.
One personal characteristic of Bishop Wilkinson stands out very strongly all through his lifethe exquisite sensitiveness and delicacy of his bodily frame. He was not a man who could rough it; he was singularly dependent upon rest, upon the refined appointments of life; his house, his dress, his apparatus were always those of a wealthy and almost aristocratic fine gentleman. I think he showed his greatness and his simplicity by not troubling about this, and accepting these as the conditions under which he could do his work best; he did not plan for them or set any affected value upon themhe was simply unconscious of them, while they somehow enhanced his mysterious grace, and showed how the arts of courtly living and the pomps and vanities of the world may be consecrated to the service of God.1 [Note: A. C. Benson, The Leaves of the Tree, 129.]
(5) Remember also the prospects of the body. The body has its own real share in the hopes and promises that cluster round the name of Jesus. The heathen saidour modern heathen say stillthe body will perish like the animals; what matters it how we treat it? Let us eat and drink, for to-morrow we die. Nay, replies Christian faith, there is a second and nobler chapter in the story even of this frail tenement we here inhabit, which sheds back its light upon the chapter we are living in now. God, who raised up Jesus, shall in due time also quicken your mortal bodies.
2. Consider the dishonour of the body.
(1) It has an inevitable tendency to usurp the place of the soul.The body is always trying to slip this domination of the powers that are above it, and become uppermost, and if this is allowed to take place the whole life is turned upside down, and man is degraded.
(2) The body has propensities which, if unduly indulged, waste and ruin life.Where lies the gravity and guilt of sins like gluttony, intemperance, or lust in any form? In this, for one thing, that they give the body the upper hand. The only right and safe thing is that the body shall always serve. Any attempt to reverse the Divine law of our nature, that that part of us which is akin to God must rule, means a loss of true manhood and inevitable suffering. The drunkard reeling down the street is, in too many cases, a man whose body has already become the grave of a lost spirit.
The sovereignty of the conscience, and the control of reason, and the force of will exist in us to control appetite. The horse, when it is held in with a firm hand in a tight rein, is a noble sight, but if the rider or driver lets the rein slip from his fingers, the very mettle and force of the brute are what lead to destruction. And so the very frailty of the body becomes the means of greater destruction unless it is held in by the superior faculties of our nature.1 [Note: J. Stalker.]
II
The Temple of the Body
Under the Old Dispensation of Law, God had a temple for His people, but under the New Dispensation of Grace, He has His people for a temple.
1. The Temple was the one place in all the land of Israel which was entirely dedicated to Gods use. It existed solely for His service, and from all secular purposes and work it was completely separated. Gods ownership was recognized in every detail of its construction and serviceit was truly the House of God. So is it with all those who are called now to be His temples.
I remember once learning, as I was standing in the magnificent Cathedral at Cologne, that Napoleon had stabled his cavalry horses in its chapel, and the very thought seemed to darken and profane the whole place. Your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost, and if any man defile the temple of God, him will God destroy.1 [Note: J. Stalker.]
2. The Temple thus dedicated to God was handed over to His possession in that wonderful prayer of Solomon. The body of a Christian believer holds another tenant than his human spirit; a Divine presence is within him, at once his glory and his power. And that Divine presence confers an unutterable sacredness upon his body. Just as he who commits sacrilege not only desecrates the material fabric, but also dishonours the God whose shrine it is; as he who performs unseemly acts in a temple not only defiles the stones and buildings, and wounds the spirits of the worshippers, but also profanes the worship of the Deity: so he who injures his body offends the Holy Ghost; he who sins against his body, not only degrades himself, but is a transgressor against the indwelling God.
They who sin against the body defile their temple, and dishonour Him who dwells in them. Some do so from an excessive devotion to the cares of this life, which, however necessary they may be to give practical directness and homely reality to spiritual character, are sure to exhaust him who lives wholly or even mainly in and for them. Some do it by an undue addiction to social excitements, which are to the intellect and imagination what stimulants are to the appetites. How many strong men, men of practical genius and large common sense; how many genial-spirited men, with rare gifts of sympathy and social qualities, are lost to the labours of our churches from these causes!2 [Note: A. Mackennal.]
3. The Temple offered to God became His indeed by His acceptance of the offering.This was sealed by fire from heaven and by the glory of the Lord filling the house (2Ch 7:1). Henceforth, in a peculiar sense, that place became Gods dwelling-place, and a type for all time of the spiritual temples which He purposes that all His people should be. No mere emotion, no strength of resolution, no strenuous striving to live aright, can ever take the place of God Himself in His people. This is the secret which alone transforms, We will come unto him, and make our abode with him (Joh 14:23).
4. The Temple thus possessed and indwelt by God became the sphere of His manifestation to man, and from thence they learned His law and received His blessing through ordinance and sacrifice. And thus it is with the Temples of the Spirit even now. They are the media through whom He chooses to manifest Himself to the world, and their lives in the power of His indwelling are set for the life and light of men. Holiness is in itself not an end, but a means to an end, the end being the blessing of others through our lives and labour. Any conception less than this degrades holiness to the level of refined selfishness, and dishonours Him whose name we bear. The Temples of God are not self-contained but Christ-communicating, and each by virtue of its existence as such is a centre of unmeasured blessing to the world.
Not in the world of light alone,
Where God has built His blazing throne,
Nor yet alone in earth below,
With belted seas that come and go,
And endless isles of sunlit green,
Is all thy Makers glory seen:
Look in upon thy wondrous frame
Eternal wisdom still the same!
The smooth, soft air with pulse-like waves
Flows murmuring through its hidden caves,
Whose streams of brightening purple rush,
Fired with a new and livelier blush,
While all their burden of decay
The ebbing current steals away,
And red with Natures flame they start
From the warm fountains of the heart.
No rest that throbbing slave may ask,
For ever quivering oer his task,
While far and wide a crimson jet
Leaps forth to fill the woven net
Which in unnumbered crossing tides
The flood of burning life divides,
Then, kindling each decaying part,
Creeps back to find the throbbing heart.
But warmed with that unchanging flame
Behold the outward moving frame,
Its living marbles jointed strong
With glistening band and silvery thong,
And linked to reasons guiding reins
By myriad rings in trembling chains,
Each graven with the threaded zone
Which claims it as the masters own.
See how yon beam of seeming white
Is braided out of seven-hued light,
Yet in those lucid globes no ray
By any chance shall break astray.
Hark how the rolling surge of sound,
Arches and spirals circling round,
Wakes the hushed spirit through thine ear
With music it is heaven to hear.
Then mark the cloven sphere that holds
All thought in its mysterious folds,
That feels sensations faintest thrill,
And flashes forth the sovereign will;
Think on the stormy world that dwells
Locked in its dim and clustering cells!
The lightning gleams of power it sheds
Along its hollow glassy threads!
O Father! grant Thy love divine
To make these mystic temples Thine!
When wasting age and wearying strife
Have sapped the leaning walls of life,
When darkness gathers over all,
And the last tottering pillars fall,
Take the poor dust Thy mercy warms,
And mould it into heavenly forms!1 [Note: Oliver Wendell Holmes, The Living Temple.]
III
The Glory of God in the Body
1. Glorify God, therefore, in your body. Do not let us mar the directness of this appeal by imitating the timidity of those later interpreters who read, Glorify God in your body and in your spirit. There is but one problem in human life, and that is the problem of the body, the organ through which alone life manifests itself, the home of our activities, the seat of our desires. Glorify God in your body was the straight appeal of one who knew what it was to stand fast in the liberty with which Christ had made him free.
Ye are not your own, that is the premise; therefore glorify God in your body, that is the conclusion. Between premise and conclusion is builded Calvary. Before Gods therefore stands a blood-stained cross and on it hangs the Son of God. If we are Gods, all that we own is His. If He owns us, He owns our property. He allows us to own it, that He may control it. If one owns a piece of ground, he owns the grass that grows on it. If God owns us, we are to glorify Him with all that we own. What we are to give Him is to depend, not on our whims and moods, not on what we think we can spare, but on what it takes to glorify Him. He is to have not what we like, but what He likes. This is the kind of ownership of property society needs to have recognized; not the public, collective ownership of land and capital for which socialism is shrieking; but the Divine ownership of property whose right rests on the claims of creation and redemption.1 [Note: J. I. Vance, Tendency, 88.]
We do not want to have our life divided up into body and spirit, secular and sacred, week-day and Sunday. The devil likes to keep us talking about what we ought not to do on Sunday morning, because none knows better than he that our destinies are really determined by what we do on Saturday night. A few reserves which are labelled sacred are the best guarantee that Beelzebub can have for undisturbed possession of the character. Give me the body is the cry of every claimant for the citadel of Mansoul, and let who will have the spirit.2 [Note: Canon J. G. Simpson.]
2. To glorify God is to do Him honour, to exalt, to magnify, to praise Him. How can we glorify God in our bodies?
(1) We glorify God in our bodies by a clear, direct recognition that the body is His shrine, His temple. Now the body, says St. Paul, is not for fornication, but for the Lord, and the Lord for the body. This implies a strenuous mental rally back to elemental principles whenever the body presumes to make its imperious demands. It implies certain times of soul-quietude when we affirm, with strong conviction, I am a manifestation of God. My body is His shrine, His temple, the theatre of His operation. If my body beguiles me into lust, anger, selfishness, unkindness to others, I am not merely making myself an objectionable nuisance, but I am guilty of sacrilege, of something akin to blasphemy against the God who dwells within me.
(2) We glorify God in our bodies by disciplining the body so that we gain the victory of self-possession. By far the best, the surest, the happiest, verification of St. Pauls great claim must be made by each man for himself in the effort of obedience; in the hidden discipline of life; through pain and toil and fear, it may be, yet, by the grace of God, not without some earnest of a victory whose faintest, briefest forecast is better than all the pleasures of compromisethe victory of self-possession for the glory of God. It is pitiful to imagine how much of strength and liberty and joy is being missed or marred day after day by the mistakes men make in dealing with their bodies. Quite apart from the misery and havoc wrought by sheer misuseby gluttony and drunkenness and lustthere are misunderstandings of the bodys meaning, and one-sided ways of treating it, which, with little or no blame perhaps, still hinder grievously the worth and happiness that life might have, and that the love of God intended for it.
(a) The body is not to be neglected or despised.In former times it was the belief of men that they honoured God by punishing the flesh. If one man were more saintly than another he would wear a hair shirt next his skin, or put round his body a belt with spikes in it. Long and rigorous fasts, great and serious privations, were thought to be special marks of religious sanctity. Are we quite free from this error? Have not we cared more for souls than bodies? We have sometimes been so busy saving souls that we have cared next to nothing for bodies.
It seems to me that the spurious and unspiritual feeling of the day is directed to spiritual even more frequently than to material objects; and above all, that to divorce from each other a care for mens bodies and for their spirits, or under any pretence whatever to cast a slight upon the former, or even upon those who exclusively (at least as they fancy) devote themselves to the former, is to set at naught the first and last lessons of the Gospels. It would be utterly shocking to me to doubt that the plainest and most literal meaning of such passages as Mat 15:32, Mar 8:2-3 is also the most important, whatever other meanings may likewise be contained within them.1 [Note: Hort, Life and Letters, i. 405.]
The great German tenor, Herr Heinrich Knote, once showed me his mirrors for examining the vocal chords. The first thing he does after waking is to see whether the vocal chords have the fine pink hue that indicates perfect health. And a red and inflamed vein means that something is wrong. His whole art is so to carry on the functions of digestion, exercise, sleep, work and play as to keep his body at the point of absolute perfection. The time was when men talked about despising the body. People wanted the moral teacher to have the students pallor and to show those signs of exhaustion that betoken the midnight oil. We have finally discovered that sickliness is not saintliness. Holiness is wholeness, or healthinessto use the Hebrew expression. God made the body to be a fearful and wonderful instrument, and a man who injures his body and by carelessness and sin appears on the street with a bad cold or indigestion, or shows signs of gluttony, ought to be as humiliated as if he had been caught stealing chickens, forging a note, or telling lies. Sickness that comes from disobedience to the laws of God represents a form of personal degradation.1 [Note: N. D. Hillis, Contagion of Influence, 205.]
Behold: eating, drinking, clothing, and other necessaries pertaining to the support of the body are burdensome to a fervent spirit.
Grant me to use such comforts with moderation, and not to be entangled with an excessive longing for them. It is not allowed us to cast them all away, for nature must be supported; but Thy holy law forbids to require superfluities and such things as are for mere delight; for otherwise the flesh would grow insolent against the spirit.
Between these, I beseech Thee, let Thy hand govern and direct me, that nothing be done in excess.2 [Note: Kempis.]
(b) The body is not to be indulged.Modern civilization addresses an ever more powerful and persuasive appeal to the lower appetites of man. The cravings of the senses are stimulated in many ways, and a wonderful organization of sensual service has been developed to satisfy them. The body is an instrument for making money, and the patient servitor of sensual pleasure, and for many nothing more.
(3) We glorify God in our bodies by trusting the love and power and resources of the Father-Soul who dwells within us. Our want of faith limits God. They who are able to concentrate upon the central fountain of life, and affirm that all that is Gods is theirs, do find the lower conditions controlled; the moral conditions of the psychical nature, and the physical conditions of the animal nature, are practically dead because they are hid with Christ in God.
One of the finest organs in Europe is in the Cathedral of Fribourg, a town in Switzerland. A good many years ago a young man came to that Cathedral and asked to be allowed to examine the organ. The attendant, not knowing who he was, at first refused to permit him to do so. After considerable persuasion he suffered him to look through it, and then in response to further persistent entreaty he allowed him to sit down and attempt to play. Forthwith there burst from the great instrument such strains of heavenly music that the attendant stood spellbound. Who are you? at last he ventured to ask. My name is Mendelssohn, was the reply. Mendelssohn! cried the attendant, lifting up his hands in amazement, and to think that I refused to let you play on the organ! There is One who wishes to bring music to the glory of God out of our lives, if we will only allow Him. Let Christ touch us, and we will be able to glorify God.1 [Note: J. Aitchison.]
(4) To glorify God in the body is manifestly self-identification with the brethren of humanity. If you would glorify God in your body, know that the humility that loves to serve, the self-subordination that induces you to leave your heaven of personal comfort to be identified with your brethrens sorrows, will propitiate the only element in the nature of the Absolute that requires propitiating, which is His yearning, hungering love. Gods human children need us all, bitterly need us.
Kings children are these all; though want and sin
Have marred their beauty glorious within,
We may not pass them but with reverent eye:
As when we see some goodly temple graced
To be Thy dwelling, ruined and defaced,
The haunt of sad and doleful creatures, lie
Bare to the sky, and open to the gust,
It grieveth us to see this House laid waste,
It pitieth us to see it in the dust!2 [Note: Dora Greenwell.]
The Body for God
Literature
Alexander (S. A.), The Christianity of St. Paul, 132.
Arnold (T.), Sermons, v. 147.
Baillie (D.), The Love of God, 80.
Black (H.), Work, 193.
Calthrop (G.), The Lost Sheep Found, 25.
Clarke (J. E.), Common-Life Sermons, 82.
Cornaby (W. A.), In Touch with Reality, 97.
Dale (R. W.), Weekday Sermons, 154.
Davidson (T.), The City Youth, 37.
Dearmer (P.), in Practical Questions, 244.
Duncan (J.), In the Pulpit and at the Communion Table, 221.
Elmslie (W. G.), Expository Lectures and Sermons, 257.
Gregg (J.), Sermons and Lectures: The Light of Faith, 81.
Herford (B.), Courage and Cheer, 191.
Hoyle (A.), The Depth and Power of the Christian Faith, 107.
Ingram (A. F. W.), The Call of the Father, 163.
Ingram (A. F. W.), A Mission of the Spirit, 123.
Mackennal (A.), The Life of Christian Consecration, 100.
Mackintosh (H. R.), Life on Gods Plan, 129.
Moule (H. C. G.), The Secret of the Presence, 33, 48.
Mursell (W. A.), The Waggon and the Star, 66.
New (C.), Sermons Preached in Hastings, 246.
Paget (F.), The Spirit of Discipline, 80.
Robarts (F. L.), Sunday Morning Talks, 116.
Russell (A.), The Light that Lighteth every Man, 309.
Shore (J. T.), Saint George for England, 42.
Simpson (J. G.), The Spirit and the Bride, 59.
Temple (F.), Rugby Chapel Sermons, ii. 297.
Van Dyke (H.), Manhood, Faith, and Courage, 99.
Walker (W. L.), The True Christ, 222.
Wilberforce (B.), The Hope that is in Me, 222.
Church Times, May 19, 1911 (Simpson).
Preachers Magazine, v. (1894) 130 (Hill).
Fuente: The Great Texts of the Bible
What: 1Co 6:15, 1Co 6:16
your body: 1Co 3:16, 2Co 6:16, Eph 2:21, Eph 2:22, 1Pe 2:5
and ye: 1Ki 20:4, 1Ch 29:14, Psa 12:4, Psa 100:3, Rom 14:7-9, 2Co 5:15, Tit 2:14
Reciprocal: Lev 26:13 – General Deu 7:6 – an holy Deu 26:17 – avouched 1Ki 6:1 – build Psa 22:23 – glorify Son 4:12 – garden Son 7:10 – my Isa 40:28 – thou not known Isa 43:21 – General Mar 12:17 – and to Joh 2:21 – temple Joh 5:23 – all men Joh 14:17 – but Joh 14:26 – Holy Ghost Act 19:2 – We have Rom 6:3 – Know Rom 8:9 – if so be Rom 8:12 – we are Rom 15:16 – being 1Co 1:13 – Paul 1Co 3:9 – ye are God’s building 1Co 3:23 – ye 1Co 6:9 – Know 1Co 6:13 – but for 2Co 8:5 – first 2Co 13:5 – Know 2Co 13:14 – the communion Phi 2:1 – if any fellowship 2Ti 1:14 – which dwelleth Heb 3:6 – whose 1Jo 3:24 – dwelleth 1Jo 4:13 – General
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
THE SACREDNESS OF THE BODY
What? know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost?
1Co 6:19
The beauty of the temple of the body, its real beauty, reflects entirely the inner life of the man. What are features, however delicately formed, without expression? And what makes the expression which we love and admire? What, but thoughts, real thoughts. Love, tenderness, sympathy! Have you ever observed how, as a person becomes more thoughtful, wiser, kinder, holier, that person grows handsomer and lovelier? Or, equally, on the other side, sin lowers, vulgarises, spoils, even distorts the countenance. When is any one so physically handsome as when he or she is saying, or doing, or thinking something of love or kindness. The real beauty of the temple after all is its consecration. It is the spirit which is the beauty.
I. What a sacred thing it would be if we always carried with us the thought and the feeling: I am a consecrated being. I am a being set apart for the sake of religion. This beauty of mine is the temple. How horrible some sins would look! How inconsistent and how out of place some of our amusements! A temple! the shrine of God here! the shrine of God doing this! What a strength and comfort, what an armour, if we can realise anything of these holy exercises in the conflict with evil! In prayerI am a temple. Poor, weak, miserable sinner as I am, I am consecrated by my baptismby my own surrender of myselfby the holiness within me. I am dedicate! I am Thine, O Lord; I have appropriated Thee. The structure may be ever so unworthy, but I am a temple. Oh! how holy would that mans life become! how the tongue would speak! how the mind would think! how the heart would beat! It is all a temple! Thine, Lord! And all I say, and all I do, and all I feel, it comes to Thine earthly temple, and goes up to Thine heavenly temple.
II. And when you are dealing with some fellow-creature, what a difference it would bewhat a new character the whole transaction would assumeif you would remember and recognise the fact that that person is a temple. However poor and wretchedhowever weak, I may say however wickedhe is a temple of God. Notwithstanding all I say or think, the Holy Ghost may be, nay the Holy Ghost is in that manworking, striving, elevating, ennobling. I am close to the Holy One! I am close to the temple! What a changed aspect would your intercourse with that man take! what a reverence to the lowest, the most offensive man in the worldto the worst man!
Illustration
There is a great danger in religionas there is in everything elseof a want of proportion. And this disproportion of truth is often the worst of errors. To avoid an extreme on one side, we run into the extreme on the other side, and the reaction is violent. Take, for instance, the relation of the body and the soul. To a man in his natural state the body is much more than the soul. He can see his body; his soul is a matter of faith. The body can give him immediate pleasure; the pleasures of the soul lie chiefly in the future. To the care of the body there is little or nothing to oppose itself; to the care of the soul, the opposition, both from within and without, is very strong. Hence, to keep or restore the health of the bodythat is, to provide for that body, to feed it and indulge it, to dress it and to adorn it, to think of it and talk about ittakes by far the greatest part of a mans life. The soul, at the very best, has just its few minutes, or perhaps a few half-hours, in the course of a week. The body is everywhere every moment. When a man becomes religious these two things change places. The body goes into the shade; it is almost out of sight. The soul is everything. Is it not the one thing worthy of thought? What is the body? A thing to mortify; a thing to keep down; a thing almost to be forgotten, if not to be despised; a mere clog. In all this there is an extravagance.
Fuente: Church Pulpit Commentary
1Co 6:19. In chapter 3:16 Paul tells the Corinthians that “ye are the temple of God,” and it means they as a congregation. In our present verse he tells the same brethren that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost. There is no discrepancy, for the church is made up of individuals, whose bodies must be kept pure in order that the church as a whole may be pure. This is why God claims possession of the bodies of the saints; it is in order that His spiritual body may be right.
Fuente: Combined Bible Commentary
1Co 6:19. What, know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you (see on chap. 1Co 2:11), which ye have from Godas His gift through the risen Saviour, and whose presence in you is the presence of God Himself, by reason of their essential oneness: Will ye then pollute and profane such a temple?and ye are not your own?
Fuente: A Popular Commentary on the New Testament
Here we have the apostle’s fifth argument against fornication and uncleanness, and it runs thus: “Temples which are peculiarly consecrated unto God and his service, ought not to be profaned or polluted; but the bodies of Christians are the temples of God, the Holy Spirit dwelling in them, and therefore they ought to be kept pure and undefiled. Know you not that your bodies are the temples of the Holy Ghost, as well as your souls?”
Our bodies are called temples of the Holy Ghost, because he hath sanctified them for himself, for his habitation, and for his service: from whence the divinity of the Holy Ghost may be strongly inferred, a temple always supposing some deity to dwell in it; the tabernacle and temple are God’s habitation. Now if the Holy Ghost dwells in good men as a temple, he is truly and really God.
In fine, since all Christians are become the temple of God, by virtue of his Holy Spirit sent into their hearts, consecrating their bodies to his sacred service, let us not desecrate or pollute this temple by defiling it with filthy lusts, but make chastity the keeper of this sacred house, and suffer nothing that defileth to enter into it, lest that God who dwelleth in it, being offended, should desert his house thus defiled.
Here we have the sixth and last argument which the apostle makes use of to flee fornication: Our bodies are not our own, but God’s; they are his by creation, his by preservation, his by purchase and redemption. We are bought out of our own hands, as well as out of the hand of divine justice; therefore we sacrilegiously rob and wrong God, when we alienate any part of his own from him, and glorify him not, whose we wholly are, by the faithful service both of our souls and bodies, which are his.
Learn, 1. That Christians are not their own, but God’s; not their own, and therefore not in their own power, not at their own disposal, not to live after their own will or by their own lusts, but according to the will and to the ends and uses of their principal Lord, whose they are.
Learn, 2. That as Christians are not their own, so must not act and live, and dispose of themselves, of their souls and bodies, as if they had an original propriety, a plenary possession, and a full dominion over themselves: a Christian must not make his own reason a supreme rule, nor his own will his chief law, nor his own interest his ultimate end, for he was made neither by himself, nor made for himself.
Learn, 3. That all of us are God’s, and therefore we cannot without great sacrilege invade his right, and give that body to an harlot which is consecrated unto him.
Learn, 4. That though we are all God’s, yet we have alienated ourselves from God, and withdrawn ourselves from his disposal.
Learn, 5. That being thus alienated form God, he has once more bought us, bought us with a price, a great and full price, the blood of his Son; and we are now God’s own again by redemption and purchase.
Learn, 6. That our bodies and spirits being thus the Lord’s, we should glorify him both in our souls and bodies which are his; glorify him in our bodies by external purity and exemplary sanctity, glorify him in our spirits by internal purity of heart.
Thus if we glorify him in our body, and in our spirits, in a way of obedience, he will at last fashion our vile bodies like unto his glorious body, and make our spirits as the spirits of just men made perfect, in that great day, when he shall come to be glorified in his saints, and admired in all them that believe.
Fuente: Expository Notes with Practical Observations on the New Testament
The Temple of the Holy Spirit
Paul said every Christian’s body is the dwelling place of the Holy Spirit ( 1Co 6:19-20 ). These verses point to an indwelling. On page 366 of The Timeless Trinity for the Ceaseless Centuries, Roy H. Lanier, Sr. says,
The Greeks have two words for temple. One is ‘hieron’ which included the place where the moneychangers had their tables, where the priests had their apartments, even where doves and cattle were kept for offerings. Then they had the word ‘naos’ which included the holy place and most holy place, the dwelling place of God…This distinction in meaning of these words is observed scrupulously by New Testament writers….How can the human body be the temple of the Spirit unless the Spirit dwells in the body? Then Paul says which is ‘in you’. Here we have that Greek preposition ‘en’ with the dative of a person again, which means ‘in the person’. So in this verse we have two proofs of the actual indwelling of the Holy Spirit: 1). The human body is the temple (naos) of the Spirit; 2). The Spirit is ‘in you’.
As sinful men ( Rom 3:23 ), the Corinthian brethren were in bondage to sin. ( Rom 7:14 ). As Christians, they had been bought, out of that bondage, by the Lord ( Act 20:28 ; Rom 6:16-23 ; Heb 9:12 ; 1Pe 1:18-19 ; Rev 5:9 ). Because God bought us, we should glorify and serve him to the best of our ability.
Fuente: Gary Hampton Commentary on Selected Books
1Co 6:19-20. Know ye not, &c. As if he had said, There is another view in which the baseness of this crime must appear to you, Christians, in consequence of your relation to that blessed agent, the Spirit of God. For your body is the temple of God Dedicated to him, and inhabited by him; even by that Spirit which is in you As true believers in Jesus, Joh 7:37-38; Eph 1:13. Which ye have Which you receive; of God As a most important, most necessary gift, without which you could not be Christs, Rom 8:9. What the apostle calls elsewhere, the temple of God, (chap. 1Co 3:16-17,) and the temple of the living God, (2Co 6:16,) he here styles the temple of the Holy Ghost; plainly showing that the Holy Ghost is the living God. The two things, as Whitby observes, necessary to constitute a temple of God, belong to the bodies of believers: they are consecrated to God, and he resides in them. Excellent, therefore, says he, is the inference of Tertullian; that since all Christians are become the temple of God, by virtue of his Holy Spirit sent into their hearts, and consecrating their bodies to his service, we should make chastity the keeper of this sacred house, and suffer nothing unclean or profane to enter into it, lest the God who dwells in it, being displeased, should desert his habitation thus defiled. And ye are not your own Even as to your bodies, any more than your souls. Both are Gods, not only by creation and preservation, but by redemption, being bought with a price; and that infinitely beyond what you can pretend to be worth, even the precious blood of Christ, by which you have been redeemed out of the hands of divine justice, and through which, being put in possession of the Holy Spirit, you are rescued from the bondage of sin and Satan, and have become subjects and servants of Christ, who has thus obtained an eternal dominion over you: whose you are too by a voluntary donation of yourselves to him, and a mystical union with him as his temples. Therefore glorify God in your body By temperance, chastity, purity; and in your spirit By faith, hope, and love; humility, resignation, patience; by meekness, gentleness, long-suffering, and universal benevolence. Or, as the words may with equal propriety be rendered, Glorify him with your body and your spirit; that is, yield your bodies and all your members, as well as your souls and all their faculties, as instruments of righteousness to God: or devote and employ all you have, and all you are, entirely, unreservedly, and for ever, to his glory.
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Vv. 19, 20. Or know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit which is in you, and which ye have of God? And ye are not your own; 20. for ye are bought with a price; therefore glorify God in your body.
The , or, signifies, Or if you deny the fatal violence done to your body by fornication, you are ignorant of the holy dignity to which it is destined, and of which it is deprived by this sin. The fornicator sins and robs his body of the honour of being the temple of God.
According to Rom 8:11, the presence of the Holy Spirit in the believer is the pledge of a glorious resurrection for his body. To renounce this dignity of being a temple and organ of the Holy Spirit by the fact of fornication, is therefore to expose himself to lose this resurrection.
The phrase, which ye have, or, which ye hold from God, is intended to emphasize strongly the superhuman origin of that Spirit whom the believer receives, and the dignity of the body in which this Divine Guest comes to dwell. We must not translate: which ye have by God, as if were used; denotes the origin and essence.
It would not be unnatural to make the last proposition, And ye are not your own, also dependent on the interrogative verb, Know ye not that…? But Hofmann rightly objects that the would require to be repeated. It must therefore be regarded as a forcible affirmation: And (because of the communication of the Spirit) ye do not any more belong to yourselves, and have consequently no longer right to dispose of your body at will. And this taking possession of the believer by the Holy Spirit is not only an act of power on God’s part, it is founded on right. This is what is explained by the first proposition of the following verse.
Vv. 20. The taking possession is legitimate; for there was the payment of a purchase price. We must not therefore translate: bought at a great price. The greatness of the price does not matter here. It is the fact of payment only which Paul would emphasize.
The particle is untranslateable; it implies the perfect evidence, and consequently urgency, of the fulfilment of the duty mentioned.
The phrase glorify God does not signify merely: not to dishonour Him; it means to display positively in the use of our body the glory and especially the holiness of the heavenly Master who has taken possession of our person. Man has lost, in whole or part, since his fall, the feeling which was so to speak the guardian of his body, that of natural modesty. Faith restores to it a more elevated guardian: self-respect as being bought by Christ the organ of the Spirit and temple of God. This is modesty raised henceforth to the height of holiness. The words which follow in the T. R., and in your spirit…, are an interpolation added with a liturgical and hortatory aim.
The three essential ideas of the passage are therefore:
1. That the use of Christian liberty as respects the body is naturally restricted by the danger of using that liberty so as to alienate it and destroy ourselves.
2. That fornication involves the Christian in a degrading physical solidarity, incompatible with the believer’s spiritual solidarity with Christ.
3. That it renders the body unfit for its Christian dignity as a temple of God, and so for its glorious destination.
It appears from this entire development that contempt of the body goes side by side with abuse of the body, while respect for the body will always be the best means of ruling it. And so the whole of Scripture, from the first page of Genesis to the last of Revelation, pays homage to the dignity of the human body.
Fuente: Godet Commentary (Luke, John, Romans and 1 Corinthians)
Or know ye not that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit which is in you, which ye have from God? [as the whole church is a temple (1Co 3:16; Rom 14:8), so also the body of each individual Christian is likewise a temple] and ye are not your own;
Fuente: McGarvey and Pendleton Commentaries (New Testament)
19. Do you not know that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost who is in you, whom you have from God, and you are not your own? How grand and glorious the conception, how inspiring the thought, that not only our spirits, but our bodies in which our spirits dwell, are the temples of the Holy Ghost!
Fuente: William Godbey’s Commentary on the New Testament
1Co 6:19-20. Known truths which greatly aggravate this unique sin against the body.
Your body, not bodies: see Rom 1:21.
Temple etc.: exactly parallel of 1Co 3:16.
Holy Spirit: appropriate designation of that inward, personal, divine, animating principle, whose every impulse is towards God and away from sin. See note, Rom 8:17. That the Spirit comes to us from God, makes dishonor to the Spirit a dishonor to the Father. This verse claims for the believer’s body, as 1Co 3:16 claims for the church generally, the dread solemnity associated with the temple at Jerusalem. The Christian’s body is the most sacred spot on earth. And every dishonor to it is an insult to the Great Spirit who has chosen it to be His dwelling place on earth, and to the Father who gave Him to us.
Not belong to yourselves: another thought suggested at once by temple. For God’s presence there removed it, as the palace of the heavenly King, from all human ownership. For where the King is, He is both ruler and owner. Therefore, the presence of the Spirit in our bodies has made them no longer our own.
1Co 6:20. For you were bought etc.: 1Co 7:23; ground of the foregoing, and another argument in support of 1Co 6:18 a. Christ died in order (Rom 14:9) that we may live a life of which He is the one aim. Therefore He died that we may be His: and His blood was the price with which He bought us for Himself. Cp. 1Pe 1:18. Consequently, all inchastity is, not only dishonor to that dread Spirit whom God has put within us, but resistance to Him who so earnestly desired us for His own that to gain us He poured out His blood.
Then glorify God: positive and general exhortation, including the negative and specific one in 1Co 6:18 a. We glorify God when we receive Him as an object of our admiration; and when, by words or works, we make Him known to others to be an object of their admiration. See under Rom 1:21.
In your body: Php 1:20. So act that your bodily presence may he a display of the grandeur of God, and may call forth admiration for God in those who have intercourse with you.
SECTION 10 is the one New Testament passage which deals professedly and fully with this one sin. Paul begins by quoting with approval a maxim used by some as a cloak for it. He shows that this maxim contains its own limits, even in these matters to which it properly refers; and, after indicating these limits, leaves his readers to apply them to the matter in hand. But indiscriminate food, to which the maxim really refers is altogether different from promiscuous intercourse of the sexes, to which some would apply it. For the one is according to, the other opposed to, God’s original design; and the one pertains to time, the other to eternity. The dignity of the human body, which Paul refers to first as a contrast, he then uses further as a direct dissuasive. To commit fornication, is to rob Christ of the members of His own body, in order to place then, by desecrating God’s ordinance, in closest fellowship with a harlot; whereas it is our privilege to have spiritual fellowship with Christ. It is a dishonor to our own sacred bodies, and to the divine inhabitant whom God has placed to dwell therein; and an invasion of a right which Christ has acquired at the cost of His own blood.
It is not Paul’s purpose to prove that fornication is wrong; (for this, in their heart of hearts, all men know;) but to show how terribly wrong it is, how utterly opposed to God’s glorious purpose about our body, how insulting to the Great Spirit who dwells within us, and how hostile to the earnestness of Him who made us His own at the cost of His life. From 1Co 5:1; 2Co 12:21, we learn how much this teaching was needed at Corinth.
The teaching of this section implies, and flows directly from the fundamental doctrines assumed in the Epistle to the Romans. 1Co 6:20 a is explained by Doctrine 2, Rom 3:24 ff; for the Lord in 1Co 6:13, by Doctrine 3, Rom 6:3-11; 1Co 6:19, by Doctrine 5, Rom 8:4-11. Members of Christ is a development of Doctrines 3 and 5.
DIVISION II., which deals with the gross misconduct of some church-members, is now complete. Paul has pronounced a severe sentence on one conspicuous offender, and has supported it by referring to the paschal sacrifice of Christ, 1Co 5:1-4; and has urged his readers to separate themselves, not from all bad men, but from all bad Christians, 1Co 5:9-13. He has shown the impropriety of their lawsuits between church members, and against all other sins, 1Co 6:1-11; and especially against inchastity. 1Co 6:12-20.
Paul has thus completed his discussion of those more pressing matters which demanded his first attention before he could reply to the questions in the letter from Corinth He dealt first, and at greatest length, in DIV. I., with the church-parties. For these had spread over the entire church; whereas only a part, probably a small part, was guilty of the misconduct mentioned in DIV. II.; and because these church-parties, and the overweening self-conceit from which they sprang, were weakening the spiritual life of the whole church and thus opening a way for the immoralities mentioned immediately afterwards.
Fuente: Beet’s Commentary on Selected Books of the New Testament
6:19 {14} What? know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost [which is] in you, which ye have of God, and {15} ye are not your own?
(14) The third argument: because a fornicator is sacrilegious, because our bodies are consecrated to God.
(15) The fourth argument: because we are not our own men, to give ourselves to any other, much less to Satan and the flesh, seeing that God himself has bought us, and that with a great price, to the end that both in body and soul, we should serve to his glory.
Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes
Another rhetorical question makes a strong, important statement. Previously Paul taught his readers that the Corinthian church was a temple (naos; 1Co 3:16). The believer’s body is also one. The Holy Spirit is really indwelling each of these temples (Rom 8:9; cf. Mat 12:6; Mat 18:15-20; Mat 28:16-20; Mar 13:11; Joh 14:17; Joh 14:23). [Note: See Sweeney, p. 629.] He is a gift to us from God (cf. 1Th 4:8). He is the best gift God has given us thus far. Consequently we have a moral obligation to the Giver. Moreover because He indwells us we belong to Him.