1 Corinthians
1 Corinthians 1 (The Message)
1
I, Paul, have been called and sent by Jesus, the Messiah, according to God's
plan, along with my friend Sosthenes. 2 I send this letter to you in God's
church at Corinth, Christians cleaned up by Jesus and set apart for a
God-filled life. I include in my greeting all who call out to Jesus, wherever
they live. He's their Master as well as ours! 3 May all the gifts and benefits
that come from God our Father, and the Master, Jesus Christ, be yours. 4 Every
time I think of you - and I think of you often! - I thank God for your lives of
free and open access to God, given by Jesus. 5 There's no end to what has
happened in you - it's beyond speech, beyond knowledge. 6 The evidence of
Christ has been clearly verified in your lives. 7 Just think - you don't need a
thing, you've got it all! All God's gifts are right in front of you as you wait
expectantly for our Master Jesus to arrive on the scene for the Finale. 8 And
not only that, but God himself is right alongside to keep you steady and on
track until things are all wrapped up by Jesus. 9 God, who got you started in
this spiritual adventure, shares with us the life of his Son and our Master
Jesus. He will never give up on you. Never forget that. The Cross: The Irony of
God's Wisdom 10 I have a serious concern to bring up with you, my friends,
using the authority of Jesus, our Master. I'll put it as urgently as I can: You
must get along with each other. You must learn to be considerate of one
another, cultivating a life in common. 11 I bring this up because some from
Chloe's family brought a most disturbing report to my attention - that you're
fighting among yourselves! 12 I'll tell you exactly what I was told: You're all
picking sides, going around saying, "I'm on Paul's side," or
"I'm for Apollos," or "Peter is my man," or "I'm in
the Messiah group." 13 I ask you, "Has the Messiah been chopped up in
little pieces so we can each have a relic all our own? Was Paul crucified for
you? Was a single one of you baptized in Paul's name?" 14 I was not
involved with any of your baptisms - except for Crispus and Gaius - and on
getting this report, I'm sure glad I wasn't. 15 At least no one can go around
saying he was baptized in my name. 16 (Come to think of it, I also baptized
Stephanas's family, but as far as I can recall, that's it.) 17 God didn't send
me out to collect a following for myself, but to preach the Message of what he
has done, collecting a following for him. And he didn't send me to do it with a
lot of fancy rhetoric of my own, lest the powerful action at the center -
Christ on the Cross - be trivialized into mere words. 18 The Message that
points to Christ on the Cross seems like sheer silliness to those hellbent on
destruction, but for those on the way of salvation it makes perfect sense. This
is the way God works, and most powerfully as it turns out. 19 It's written,
I'll turn conventional wisdom on its head, I'll expose so-called experts as
crackpots. 20 So where can you find someone truly wise, truly educated, truly
intelligent in this day and age? Hasn't God exposed it all as pretentious
nonsense? 21 Since the world in all its fancy wisdom never had a clue when it
came to knowing God, God in his wisdom took delight in using what the world
considered dumb - preaching, of all things! - to bring those who trust him into
the way of salvation. 22 While Jews clamor for miraculous demonstrations and
Greeks go in for philosophical wisdom, 23 we go right on proclaiming Christ,
the Crucified. Jews treat this like an anti-miracle - and Greeks pass it off as
absurd. 24 But to us who are personally called by God himself - both Jews and
Greeks - Christ is God's ultimate miracle and wisdom all wrapped up in one. 25
Human wisdom is so tinny, so impotent, next to the seeming absurdity of God.
Human strength can't begin to compete with God's "weakness." 26 Take
a good look, friends, at who you were when you got called into this life. I
don't see many of "the brightest and the best" among you, not many
influential, not many from high-society families. 27 Isn't it obvious that God
deliberately chose men and women that the culture overlooks and exploits and
abuses, 28 chose these "nobodies" to expose the hollow pretensions of
the "somebodies"? 29 That makes it quite clear that none of you can
get by with blowing your own horn before God. 30 Everything that we have -
right thinking and right living, a clean slate and a fresh start - comes from
God by way of Jesus Christ. 31 That's why we have the saying, "If you're
going to blow a horn, blow a trumpet for God."
1 Corinthians 2 (The Message)
1
You'll remember, friends, that when I first came to you to let you in on God's
master stroke, I didn't try to impress you with polished speeches and the
latest philosophy. 2 I deliberately kept it plain and simple: first Jesus and
who he is; then Jesus and what he did - Jesus crucified. 3 I was unsure of how
to go about this, and felt totally inadequate - I was scared to death, if you
want the truth of it - 4 and so nothing I said could have impressed you or
anyone else. But the Message came through anyway. God's Spirit and God's power
did it, 5 which made it clear that your life of faith is a response to God's
power, not to some fancy mental or emotional footwork by me or anyone else. 6
We, of course, have plenty of wisdom to pass on to you once you get your feet
on firm spiritual ground, but it's not popular wisdom, the fashionable wisdom
of high-priced experts that will be out-of-date in a year or so. 7 God's wisdom
is something mysterious that goes deep into the interior of his purposes. You
don't find it lying around on the surface. It's not the latest message, but
more like the oldest - what God determined as the way to bring out his best in
us, long before we ever arrived on the scene. 8 The experts of our day haven't
a clue about what this eternal plan is. If they had, they wouldn't have killed
the Master of the God-designed life on a cross. 9 That's why we have this
Scripture text: No one's ever seen or heard anything like this, Never so much
as imagined anything quite like it - What God has arranged for those who love
him. 10 But you've seen and heard it because God by his Spirit has brought it
all out into the open before you. 11 Who ever knows what you're thinking and
planning except you yourself? The same with God - except that he not only knows
what he's thinking, 12 but he lets us in on it. God offers a full report on the
gifts of life and salvation that he is giving us. 13 We don't have to rely on
the world's guesses and opinions. We didn't learn this by reading books or
going to school; we learned it from God, who taught us person-to-person through
Jesus, and we're passing it on to you in the same firsthand, personal way. 14
The unspiritual self, just as it is by nature, can't receive the gifts of God's
Spirit. There's no capacity for them. They seem like so much silliness. Spirit
can be known only by spirit - God's Spirit and our spirits in open communion.
15 Spiritually alive, we have access to everything God's Spirit is doing, and
can't be judged by unspiritual critics. 16 Isaiah's question, "Is there
anyone around who knows God's Spirit, anyone who knows what he is doing?"
has been answered: Christ knows, and we have Christ's Spirit.
1 Corinthians 3 (The Message)
1
But for right now, friends, I'm completely frustrated by your unspiritual
dealings with each other and with God. You're acting like infants in relation
to Christ, 2 capable of nothing much more than nursing at the breast. Well,
then, I'll nurse you since you don't seem capable of anything more. 3 As long
as you grab for what makes you feel good or makes you look important, are you
really much different than a babe at the breast, content only when everything's
going your way? 4 When one of you says, "I'm on Paul's side," and
another says, "I'm for Apollos," aren't you being totally infantile?
5 Who do you think Paul is, anyway? Or Apollos, for that matter? Servants, both
of us - servants who waited on you as you gradually learned to entrust your
lives to our mutual Master. We each carried out our servant assignment. 6 I
planted the seed, Apollos watered the plants, but God made you grow. 7 It's not
the one who plants or the one who waters who is at the center of this process
but God, who makes things grow. 8 Planting and watering are menial servant jobs
at minimum wages. 9 What makes them worth doing is the God we are serving. You
happen to be God's field in which we are working. 10 Using the gift God gave me
as a good architect, I designed blueprints; Apollos is putting up the walls.
Let each carpenter who comes on the job take care to build on the foundation!
11 Remember, there is only one foundation, the one already laid: Jesus Christ.
12 Take particular care in picking out your building materials. 13 Eventually
there is going to be an inspection. If you use cheap or inferior materials,
you'll be found out. The inspection will be thorough and rigorous. You won't
get by with a thing. 14 If your work passes inspection, fine; 15 if it doesn't,
your part of the building will be torn out and started over. But you won't be
torn out; you'll survive - but just barely. 16 You realize, don't you, that you
are the temple of God, and God himself is present in you? 17 No one will get by
with vandalizing God's temple, you can be sure of that. God's temple is sacred
- and you, remember, are the temple. 18 Don't fool yourself. Don't think that
you can be wise merely by being up-to-date with the times. 19 Be God's fool -
that's the path to true wisdom. What the world calls smart, God calls stupid.
It's written in Scripture, He exposes the chicanery of the chic. 20 The Master
sees through the smoke screens of the know-it-alls. 21 I don't want to hear any
of you bragging about yourself or anyone else. Everything is already yours as a
gift - 22 Paul, Apollos, Peter, the world, life, death, the present, the future
- all of it is yours, 23 and you are privileged to be in union with Christ, who
is in union with God.
1 Corinthians 4 (The Message)
1
Don't imagine us leaders to be something we aren't. We are servants of Christ,
not his masters. We are guides into God's most sublime secrets, not security
guards posted to protect them. 2 The requirements for a good guide are
reliability and accurate knowledge. 3 It matters very little to me what you
think of me, even less where I rank in popular opinion. I don't even rank
myself. Comparisons in these matters are pointless. 4 I'm not aware of anything
that would disqualify me from being a good guide for you, but that doesn't mean
much. The Master makes that judgment. 5 So don't get ahead of the Master and
jump to conclusions with your judgments before all the evidence is in. When he
comes, he will bring out in the open and place in evidence all kinds of things
we never even dreamed of - inner motives and purposes and prayers. Only then
will any one of us get to hear the "Well done!" of God. 6 All I'm
doing right now, friends, is showing how these things pertain to Apollos and me
so that you will learn restraint and not rush into making judgments without
knowing all the facts. It's important to look at things from God's point of
view. I would rather not see you inflating or deflating reputations based on
mere hearsay. 7 For who do you know that really knows you, knows your heart?
And even if they did, is there anything they would discover in you that you
could take credit for? Isn't everything you have and everything you are sheer
gifts from God? So what's the point of all this comparing and competing? 8 You
already have all you need. You already have more access to God than you can
handle. Without bringing either Apollos or me into it, you're sitting on top of
the world - at least God's world - and we're right there, sitting alongside
you! 9 It seems to me that God has put us who bear his Message on stage in a
theater in which no one wants to buy a ticket. We're something everyone stands
around and stares at, like an accident in the street. 10 We're the Messiah's
misfits. You might be sure of yourselves, but we live in the midst of frailties
and uncertainties. You might be well-thought-of by others, but we're mostly
kicked around. 11 Much of the time we don't have enough to eat, we wear patched
and threadbare clothes, we get doors slammed in our faces, 12 and we pick up
odd jobs anywhere we can to eke out a living. When they call us names, we say,
"God bless you." 13 When they spread rumors about us, we put in a
good word for them. We're treated like garbage, potato peelings from the
culture's kitchen. And it's not getting any better. 14 I'm not writing all this
as a neighborhood scold just to make you feel rotten. I'm writing as a father
to you, my children. I love you and want you to grow up well, not spoiled. 15
There are a lot of people around who can't wait to tell you what you've done
wrong, but there aren't many fathers willing to take the time and effort to
help you grow up. It was as Jesus helped me proclaim God's Message to you that
I became your father. 16 I'm not, you know, asking you to do anything I'm not
already doing myself. 17 This is why I sent Timothy to you earlier. He is also
my dear son, and true to the Master. He will refresh your memory on the
instructions I regularly give all the churches on the way of Christ. 18 I know
there are some among you who are so full of themselves they never listen to
anyone, let alone me. They don't think I'll ever show up in person. 19 But I'll
be there sooner than you think, God willing, and then we'll see if they're full
of anything but hot air. 20 God's Way is not a matter of mere talk; it's an empowered
life. 21 So how should I prepare to come to you? As a severe disciplinarian who
makes you toe the mark? Or as a good friend and counselor who wants to share
heart-to-heart with you? You decide.
1 Corinthians 5 (The Message)
1
I also received a report of scandalous sex within your church family, a kind
that wouldn't be tolerated even outside the church: One of your men is sleeping
with his stepmother. 2 And you're so above it all that it doesn't even faze
you! Shouldn't this break your hearts? Shouldn't it bring you to your knees in
tears? Shouldn't this person and his conduct be confronted and dealt with? 3
I'll tell you what I would do. Even though I'm not there in person, consider me
right there with you, because I can fully see what's going on. I'm telling you
that this is wrong. You must not simply look the other way and hope it goes
away on its own. Bring it out in the open and deal with it in the authority of
Jesus our Master. 4 Assemble the community - I'll be present in spirit with you
and our Master Jesus will be present in power. 5 Hold this man's conduct up to
public scrutiny. Let him defend it if he can! But if he can't, then out with
him! It will be totally devastating to him, of course, and embarrassing to you.
But better devastation and embarrassment than damnation. You want him on his
feet and forgiven before the Master on the Day of Judgment. 6 Your flip and
callous arrogance in these things bothers me. You pass it off as a small thing,
but it's anything but that. Yeast, too, is a "small thing," but it
works its way through a whole batch of bread dough pretty fast. 7 So get rid of
this "yeast." Our true identity is flat and plain, not puffed up with
the wrong kind of ingredient. The Messiah, our Passover Lamb, has already been
sacrificed for the Passover meal, and we are the Unraised Bread part of the
Feast. 8 So let's live out our part in the Feast, not as raised bread swollen
with the yeast of evil, but as flat bread - simple, genuine, unpretentious. 9 I
wrote you in my earlier letter that you shouldn't make yourselves at home among
the sexually promiscuous. 10 I didn't mean that you should have nothing at all
to do with outsiders of that sort. Or with crooks, whether blue- or
white-collar. Or with spiritual phonies, for that matter. You'd have to leave
the world entirely to do that! 11 But I am saying that you shouldn't act as if
everything is just fine when one of your Christian companions is promiscuous or
crooked, is flip with God or rude to friends, gets drunk or becomes greedy and predatory.
You can't just go along with this, treating it as acceptable behavior. 12 I'm
not responsible for what the outsiders do, but don't we have some
responsibility for those within our community of believers? 13 God decides on
the outsiders, but we need to decide when our brothers and sisters are out of
line and, if necessary, clean house.
1 Corinthians 6 (The Message)
1
And how dare you take each other to court! When you think you have been
wronged, does it make any sense to go before a court that knows nothing of
God's ways instead of a family of Christians? 2 The day is coming when the
world is going to stand before a jury made up of Christians. If someday you are
going to rule on the world's fate, wouldn't it be a good idea to practice on
some of these smaller cases? 3 Why, we're even going to judge angels! So why
not these everyday affairs? 4 As these disagreements and wrongs surface, why
would you ever entrust them to the judgment of people you don't trust in any
other way? 5 I say this as bluntly as I can to wake you up to the stupidity of
what you're doing. Is it possible that there isn't one levelheaded person among
you who can make fair decisions when disagreements and disputes come up? I
don't believe it. 6 And here you are taking each other to court before people
who don't even believe in God! How can they render justice if they don't
believe in the God of justice? 7 These court cases are an ugly blot on your
community. Wouldn't it be far better to just take it, to let yourselves be
wronged and forget it? 8 All you're doing is providing fuel for more wrong,
more injustice, bringing more hurt to the people of your own spiritual family.
9 Don't you realize that this is not the way to live? Unjust people who don't
care about God will not be joining in his kingdom. Those who use and abuse each
other, use and abuse sex, 10 use and abuse the earth and everything in it,
don't qualify as citizens in God's kingdom. 11 A number of you know from
experience what I'm talking about, for not so long ago you were on that list.
Since then, you've been cleaned up and given a fresh start by Jesus, our
Master, our Messiah, and by our God present in us, the Spirit. 12 Just because
something is technically legal doesn't mean that it's spiritually appropriate.
If I went around doing whatever I thought I could get by with, I'd be a slave
to my whims. 13 You know the old saying, "First you eat to live, and then
you live to eat"? Well, it may be true that the body is only a temporary
thing, but that's no excuse for stuffing your body with food, or indulging it
with sex. Since the Master honors you with a body, honor him with your body! 14
God honored the Master's body by raising it from the grave. He'll treat yours
with the same resurrection power. 15 Until that time, remember that your bodies
are created with the same dignity as the Master's body. You wouldn't take the
Master's body off to a whorehouse, would you? I should hope not. 16 There's
more to sex than mere skin on skin. Sex is as much spiritual mystery as physical
fact. As written in Scripture, "The two become one." 17 Since we want
to become spiritually one with the Master, we must not pursue the kind of sex
that avoids commitment and intimacy, leaving us more lonely than ever - the
kind of sex that can never "become one." 18 There is a sense in which
sexual sins are different from all others. In sexual sin we violate the
sacredness of our own bodies, these bodies that were made for God-given and
God-modeled love, for "becoming one" with another. 19 Or didn't you realize
that your body is a sacred place, the place of the Holy Spirit? Don't you see
that you can't live however you please, squandering what God paid such a high
price for? The physical part of you is not some piece of property belonging to
the spiritual part of you. 20 God owns the whole works. So let people see God
in and through your body.
1 Corinthians 7 (The Message)
1
Now, getting down to the questions you asked in your letter to me. First, Is it
a good thing to have sexual relations? 2 Certainly - but only within a certain
context. It's good for a man to have a wife, and for a woman to have a husband.
Sexual drives are strong, but marriage is strong enough to contain them and
provide for a balanced and fulfilling sexual life in a world of sexual disorder.
3 The marriage bed must be a place of mutuality - the husband seeking to
satisfy his wife, the wife seeking to satisfy her husband. 4 Marriage is not a
place to "stand up for your rights." Marriage is a decision to serve
the other, whether in bed or out. 5 Abstaining from sex is permissible for a
period of time if you both agree to it, and if it's for the purposes of prayer
and fasting - but only for such times. Then come back together again. Satan has
an ingenious way of tempting us when we least expect it. 6 I'm not, understand,
commanding these periods of abstinence - only providing my best counsel if you
should choose them. 7 Sometimes I wish everyone were single like me - a simpler
life in many ways! But celibacy is not for everyone any more than marriage is.
God gives the gift of the single life to some, the gift of the married life to
others. 8 I do, though, tell the unmarried and widows that singleness might
well be the best thing for them, as it has been for me. 9 But if they can't
manage their desires and emotions, they should by all means go ahead and get
married. The difficulties of marriage are preferable by far to a sexually
tortured life as a single. 10 And if you are married, stay married. This is the
Master's command, not mine. 11 If a wife should leave her husband, she must
either remain single or else come back and make things right with him. And a
husband has no right to get rid of his wife. 12 For the rest of you who are in
mixed marriages - Christian married to nonChristian - we have no explicit
command from the Master. So this is what you must do. If you are a man with a
wife who is not a believer but who still wants to live with you, hold on to
her. 13 If you are a woman with a husband who is not a believer but he wants to
live with you, hold on to him. 14 The unbelieving husband shares to an extent
in the holiness of his wife, and the unbelieving wife is likewise touched by
the holiness of her husband. Otherwise, your children would be left out; as it
is, they also are included in the spiritual purposes of God. 15 On the other
hand, if the unbelieving spouse walks out, you've got to let him or her go. You
don't have to hold on desperately. God has called us to make the best of it, as
peacefully as we can. 16 You never know, wife: The way you handle this might
bring your husband not only back to you but to God. You never know, husband:
The way you handle this might bring your wife not only back to you but to God.
17 And don't be wishing you were someplace else or with someone else. Where you
are right now is God's place for you. Live and obey and love and believe right
there. God, not your marital status, defines your life. Don't think I'm being
harder on you than on the others. I give this same counsel in all the churches.
18 Were you Jewish at the time God called you? Don't try to remove the
evidence. Were you non-Jewish at the time of your call? Don't become a Jew. 19
Being Jewish isn't the point. The really important thing is obeying God's call,
following his commands. 20 Stay where you were when God called your name. 21
Were you a slave? Slavery is no roadblock to obeying and believing. I don't
mean you're stuck and can't leave. If you have a chance at freedom, go ahead
and take it. 22 I'm simply trying to point out that under your new Master
you're going to experience a marvelous freedom you would never have dreamed of.
On the other hand, if you were free when Christ called you, you'll experience a
delightful "enslavement to God" you would never have dreamed of. 23
All of you, slave and free both, were once held hostage in a sinful society.
Then a huge sum was paid out for your ransom. So please don't, out of old
habit, slip back into being or doing what everyone else tells you. 24 Friends,
stay where you were called to be. God is there. Hold the high ground with him
at your side. 25 The Master did not give explicit direction regarding virgins,
but as one much experienced in the mercy of the Master and loyal to him all the
way, you can trust my counsel. 26 Because of the current pressures on us from
all sides, I think it would probably be best to stay just as you are. 27 Are
you married? Stay married. Are you unmarried? Don't get married. 28 But there's
certainly no sin in getting married, whether you're a virgin or not. All I am
saying is that when you marry, you take on additional stress in an already
stressful time, and I want to spare you if possible. 29 I do want to point out,
friends, that time is of the essence. There is no time to waste, so don't
complicate your lives unnecessarily. Keep it simple - in marriage, 30 grief,
joy, whatever. Even in ordinary things - your daily routines of shopping, and
so on. 31 Deal as sparingly as possible with the things the world thrusts on
you. This world as you see it is on its way out. 32 I want you to live as free
of complications as possible. When you're unmarried, you're free to concentrate
on simply pleasing the Master. 33 Marriage involves you in all the nuts and
bolts of domestic life and in wanting to please your spouse, 34 leading to so
many more demands on your attention. The time and energy that married people
spend on caring for and nurturing each other, the unmarried can spend in
becoming whole and holy instruments of God. 35 I'm trying to be helpful and
make it as easy as possible for you, not make things harder. All I want is for
you to be able to develop a way of life in which you can spend plenty of time
together with the Master without a lot of distractions. 36 If a man has a woman
friend to whom he is loyal but never intended to marry, having decided to serve
God as a "single," and then changes his mind, deciding he should
marry her, he should go ahead and marry. It's no sin; it's not even a
"step down" from celibacy, as some say. 37 On the other hand, if a man
is comfortable in his decision for a single life in service to God and it's
entirely his own conviction and not imposed on him by others, he ought to stick
with it. 38 Marriage is spiritually and morally right and not inferior to
singleness in any way, although as I indicated earlier, because of the times we
live in, I do have pastoral reasons for encouraging singleness. 39 A wife must
stay with her husband as long as he lives. If he dies, she is free to marry
anyone she chooses. She will, of course, want to marry a believer and have the
blessing of the Master. 40 By now you know that I think she'll be better off
staying single. The Master, in my opinion, thinks so, too.
1 Corinthians 8 (The Message)
1
The question keeps coming up regarding meat that has been offered up to an
idol: Should you attend meals where such meat is served, or not? We sometimes
tend to think we know all we need to know to answer these kinds of questions -
2 but sometimes our humble hearts can help us more than our proud minds. 3 We
never really know enough until we recognize that God alone knows it all. 4 Some
people say, quite rightly, that idols have no actual existence, that there's
nothing to them, that there is no God other than our one God, 5 that no matter
how many of these so-called gods are named and worshiped they still don't add
up to anything but a tall story. 6 They say - again, quite rightly - that there
is only one God the Father, that everything comes from him, and that he wants
us to live for him. Also, they say that there is only one Master - Jesus the
Messiah - and that everything is for his sake, including us. Yes. It's true. 7
In strict logic, then, nothing happened to the meat when it was offered up to
an idol. It's just like any other meat. I know that, and you know that. But knowing
isn't everything. If it becomes everything, some people end up as know-it-alls
who treat others as know-nothings. Real knowledge isn't that insensitive. We
need to be sensitive to the fact that we're not all at the same level of
understanding in this. Some of you have spent your entire lives eating
"idol meat," and are sure that there's something bad in the meat that
then becomes something bad inside of you. An imagination and conscience shaped
under those conditions isn't going to change overnight. 8 But fortunately God
doesn't grade us on our diet. We're neither commended when we clean our plate
nor reprimanded when we just can't stomach it. 9 But God does care when you use
your freedom carelessly in a way that leads a Christian still vulnerable to those
old associations to be thrown off track. 10 For instance, say you flaunt your
freedom by going to a banquet thrown in honor of idols, where the main course
is meat sacrificed to idols. Isn't there great danger if someone still
struggling over this issue, someone who looks up to you as knowledgeable and
mature, sees you go into that banquet? The danger is that he will become
terribly confused - maybe even to the point of getting mixed up himself in what
his conscience tells him is wrong. 11 Christ gave up his life for that person.
Wouldn't you at least be willing to give up going to dinner for him - because,
as you say, it doesn't really make any difference? But it does make a
difference if you hurt your friend terribly, risking his eternal ruin! 12 When you
hurt your friend, you hurt Christ. A free meal here and there isn't worth it at
the cost of even one of these "weak ones." 13 So, never go to these
idol-tainted meals if there's any chance it will trip up one of your brothers
or sisters.
1 Corinthians 9 (The Message)
1
And don't tell me that I have no authority to write like this. I'm perfectly
free to do this - isn't that obvious? Haven't I been given a job to do? Wasn't
I commissioned to this work in a face-to-face meeting with Jesus, our Master?
Aren't you yourselves proof of the good work that I've done for the Master? 2
Even if no one else admits the authority of my commission, you can't deny it.
Why, my work with you is living proof of my authority! 3 I'm not shy in
standing up to my critics. 4 We who are on missionary assignments for God have
a right to decent accommodations, 5 and we have a right to support for us and
our families. You don't seem to have raised questions with the other apostles
and our Master's brothers and Peter in these matters. 6 So, why me? Is it just
Barnabas and I who have to go it alone and pay our own way? 7 Are soldiers
self-employed? Are gardeners forbidden to eat vegetables from their own
gardens? Don't milkmaids get to drink their fill from the pail? 8 I'm not just
sounding off because I'm irritated. This is all written in the scriptural law.
9 Moses wrote, "Don't muzzle an ox to keep it from eating the grain when
it's threshing." Do you think Moses' primary concern was the care of farm
animals? 10 Don't you think his concern extends to us? Of course. Farmers plow
and thresh expecting something when the crop comes in. 11 So if we have planted
spiritual seed among you, is it out of line to expect a meal or two from you?
12 Others demand plenty from you in these ways. Don't we who have never
demanded deserve even more? 13 All I'm concerned with right now is that you not
use our decision to take advantage of others, depriving them of what is rightly
theirs. You know, don't you, that it's always been taken for granted that those
who work in the Temple live off the proceeds of the Temple, and that those who
offer sacrifices at the altar eat their meals from what has been sacrificed? 14
Along the same lines, the Master directed that those who spread the Message be
supported by those who believe the Message. 15 Still, I want it made clear that
I've never gotten anything out of this for myself, and that I'm not writing now
to get something. I'd rather die than give anyone ammunition to discredit me or
impugn my motives. 16 If I proclaim the Message, it's not to get something out
of it for myself. I'm compelled to do it, and doomed if I don't! 17 If this was
my own idea of just another way to make a living, I'd expect some pay. But
since it's not my idea but something solemnly entrusted to me, why would I
expect to get paid? 18 So am I getting anything out of it? Yes, as a matter of
fact: the pleasure of proclaiming the Message at no cost to you. You don't even
have to pay my expenses! 19 Even though I am free of the demands and expectations
of everyone, I have voluntarily become a servant to any and all in order to
reach a wide range of people: 20 religious, nonreligious, 21 meticulous
moralists, loose-living immoralists, 22 the defeated, the demoralized -
whoever. I didn't take on their way of life. I kept my bearings in Christ - but
I entered their world and tried to experience things from their point of view.
I've become just about every sort of servant there is in my attempts to lead
those I meet into a God-saved life. 23 I did all this because of the Message. I
didn't just want to talk about it; I wanted to be in on it! 24 You've all been
to the stadium and seen the athletes race. Everyone runs; one wins. Run to win.
25 All good athletes train hard. They do it for a gold medal that tarnishes and
fades. You're after one that's gold eternally. 26 I don't know about you, but
I'm running hard for the finish line. I'm giving it everything I've got. No
sloppy living for me! 27 I'm staying alert and in top condition. I'm not going
to get caught napping, telling everyone else all about it and then missing out
myself.
1 Corinthians 10 (The Message)
1
Remember our history, friends, and be warned. All our ancestors were led by the
providential Cloud and taken miraculously through the Sea. 2 They went through
the waters, in a baptism like ours, as Moses led them from enslaving death to
salvation life. 3 They all ate 4 and drank identical food and drink, meals
provided daily by God. They drank from the Rock, God's fountain for them that
stayed with them wherever they were. And the Rock was Christ. 5 But just
experiencing God's wonder and grace didn't seem to mean much - most of them
were defeated by temptation during the hard times in the desert, and God was
not pleased. 6 The same thing could happen to us. We must be on guard so that
we never get caught up in wanting our own way as they did. 7 And we must not
turn our religion into a circus as they did - "First the people partied,
then they threw a dance." 8 We must not be sexually promiscuous - they
paid for that, remember, with twenty-three thousand deaths in one day! 9 We
must never try to get Christ to serve us instead of us serving him; they tried
it, and God launched an epidemic of poisonous snakes. 10 We must be careful not
to stir up discontent; discontent destroyed them. 11 These are all warning
markers - danger! - in our history books, written down so that we don't repeat
their mistakes. Our positions in the story are parallel - they at the
beginning, we at the end - and we are just as capable of messing it up as they
were. 12 Don't be so naive and self-confident. You're not exempt. You could
fall flat on your face as easily as anyone else. Forget about self-confidence;
it's useless. Cultivate God-confidence. 13 No test or temptation that comes
your way is beyond the course of what others have had to face. All you need to
remember is that God will never let you down; he'll never let you be pushed
past your limit; he'll always be there to help you come through it. 14 So, my
very dear friends, when you see people reducing God to something they can use
or control, get out of their company as fast as you can. 15 I assume I'm
addressing believers now who are mature. Draw your own conclusions: 16 When we
drink the cup of blessing, aren't we taking into ourselves the blood, the very
life, of Christ? And isn't it the same with the loaf of bread we break and eat?
Don't we take into ourselves the body, the very life, of Christ? 17 Because
there is one loaf, our many-ness becomes one-ness - Christ doesn't become
fragmented in us. Rather, we become unified in him. We don't reduce Christ to
what we are; he raises us to what he is. 18 That's basically what happened even
in old Israel - those who ate the sacrifices offered on God's altar entered
into God's action at the altar. 19 Do you see the difference? Sacrifices
offered to idols are offered to nothing, for what's the idol but a nothing? 20
Or worse than nothing, a minus, a demon! I don't want you to become part of
something that reduces you to less than yourself. 21 And you can't have it both
ways, banqueting with the Master one day and slumming with demons the next. 22
Besides, the Master won't put up with it. He wants us - all or nothing. Do you
think you can get off with anything less? 23 Looking at it one way, you could
say, "Anything goes. Because of God's immense generosity and grace, we
don't have to dissect and scrutinize every action to see if it will pass
muster." But the point is not to just get by. 25 With that as a base to
work from, common sense can take you the rest of the way. Eat anything sold at
the butcher shop, for instance; you don't have to run an "idolatry
test" on every item. 26 "The earth," after all, "is God's,
and everything in it." That "everything" certainly includes the
leg of lamb in the butcher shop. 27 If a nonbeliever invites you to dinner and
you feel like going, go ahead and enjoy yourself; eat everything placed before
you. It would be both bad manners and bad spirituality to cross-examine your
host on the ethical purity of each course as it is served. 28 On the other
hand, if he goes out of his way to tell you that this or that was sacrificed to
god or goddess so-and-so, you should pass. Even though you may be indifferent
as to where it came from, he isn't, and you don't want to send mixed messages
to him about who you are worshiping. 29 But, except for these special cases,
I'm not going to walk around on eggshells worrying about what small-minded
people might say; I'm going to stride free and easy, knowing what our large-minded
Master has already said. 30 If I eat what is served to me, grateful to God for
what is on the table, how can I worry about what someone will say? I thanked
God for it and he blessed it! 31 So eat your meals heartily, not worrying about
what others say about you - you're eating to God's glory, after all, not to
please them. As a matter of fact, do everything that way, heartily and freely
to God's glory. 32 At the same time, don't be callous in your exercise of
freedom, thoughtlessly stepping on the toes of those who aren't as free as you
are. 33 I try my best to be considerate of everyone's feelings in all these
matters; I hope you will be, too. 224 We want to live well, but our foremost
efforts should be to help others live well.
1 Corinthians 11 (The Message)
1
It pleases me that you continue to remember and honor me by keeping up the
traditions of the faith I taught you. All actual authority stems from Christ. 2
3 In a marriage relationship, there is authority from Christ to husband, and
from husband to wife. The authority of Christ is the authority of God. 4 Any
man who speaks with God or about God in a way that shows a lack of respect for
the authority of Christ, dishonors Christ. 5 In the same way, a wife who speaks
with God in a way that shows a lack of respect for the authority of her
husband, dishonors her husband. 6 Worse, she dishonors herself - an ugly sight,
like a woman with her head shaved. This is basically the origin of these
customs we have of women wearing head coverings in worship, while men take
their hats off. By these symbolic acts, 7 men and women, who far too often butt
heads with each other, submit their "heads" to the Head: God. 8 9 10
Don't, by the way, read too much into the differences here between men and
women. 11 Neither man nor woman can go it alone or claim priority. Man was
created first, as a beautiful shining reflection of God - that is true. But the
head on a woman's body clearly outshines in beauty the head of her
"head," her husband. 12 The first woman came from man, true - but
ever since then, every man comes from a woman! And since virtually everything
comes from God anyway, let's quit going through these "who's first"
routines. 13 Don't you agree there is something naturally powerful in the
symbolism - a woman, her beautiful hair reminiscent of angels, praying in
adoration; a man, his head bared in reverence, praying in submission? 14 15 16
I hope you're not going to be argumentative about this. All God's churches see
it this way; I don't want you standing out as an exception. 17 Regarding this
next item, I'm not at all pleased. I am getting the picture that when you meet
together it brings out your worst side instead of your best! 18 First, I get
this report on your divisiveness, competing with and criticizing each other.
I'm reluctant to believe it, but there it is. 19 The best that can be said for
it is that the testing process will bring truth into the open and confirm it.
20 And then I find that you bring your divisions to worship - you come
together, and instead of eating the Lord's Supper, 21 you bring in a lot of
food from the outside and make pigs of yourselves. Some are left out, and go
home hungry. Others have to be carried out, too drunk to walk. I can't believe
it! 22 Don't you have your own homes to eat and drink in? Why would you stoop
to desecrating God's church? Why would you actually shame God's poor? I never
would have believed you would stoop to this. And I'm not going to stand by and
say nothing. 23 Let me go over with you again exactly what goes on in the
Lord's Supper and why it is so centrally important. I received my instructions
from the Master himself and passed them on to you. The Master, Jesus, on the
night of his betrayal, took bread. 24 Having given thanks, he broke it and
said, This is my body, broken for you. Do this to remember me. 25 After supper,
he did the same thing with the cup: This cup is my blood, my new covenant with
you. Each time you drink this cup, remember me. 26 What you must solemnly
realize is that every time you eat this bread and every time you drink this
cup, you reenact in your words and actions the death of the Master. You will be
drawn back to this meal again and again until the Master returns. You must
never let familiarity breed contempt. 27 Anyone who eats the bread or drinks
the cup of the Master irreverently is like part of the crowd that jeered and
spit on him at his death. Is that the kind of "remembrance" you want
to be part of? 28 Examine your motives, test your heart, come to this meal in
holy awe. 29 If you give no thought (or worse, don't care) about the broken
body of the Master when you eat and drink, you're running the risk of serious
consequences. 30 That's why so many of you even now are listless and sick, and
others have gone to an early grave. 31 If we get this straight now, we won't
have to be straightened out later on. 32 Better to be confronted by the Master
now than to face a fiery confrontation later. 33 So, my friends, when you come
together to the Lord's Table, be reverent and courteous with one another. 34 If
you're so hungry that you can't wait to be served, go home and get a sandwich.
But by no means risk turning this Meal into an eating and drinking binge or a
family squabble. It is a spiritual meal - a love feast. The other things you
asked about, I'll respond to in person when I make my next visit.
1 Corinthians 12 (The Message)
1
What I want to talk about now is the various ways God's Spirit gets worked into
our lives. This is complex and often misunderstood, but I want you to be
informed and knowledgeable. 2 Remember how you were when you didn't know God,
led from one phony god to another, never knowing what you were doing, just
doing it because everybody else did it? It's different in this life. God wants
us to use our intelligence, to seek to understand as well as we can. 3 For
instance, by using your heads, you know perfectly well that the Spirit of God
would never prompt anyone to say "Jesus be damned!" Nor would anyone
be inclined to say "Jesus is Master!" without the insight of the Holy
Spirit. 4 God's various gifts are handed out everywhere; but they all originate
in God's Spirit. 5 God's various ministries are carried out everywhere; but
they all originate in God's Spirit. 6 God's various expressions of power are in
action everywhere; but God himself is behind it all. 7 Each person is given
something to do that shows who God is: Everyone gets in on it, everyone
benefits. All kinds of things are handed out by the Spirit, and to all kinds of
people! 8 The variety is wonderful: wise counsel clear understanding 9 simple
trust healing the sick 10 miraculous acts proclamation distinguishing between
spirits tongues interpretation of tongues. 11 All these gifts have a common
origin, but are handed out one by one by the one Spirit of God. He decides who
gets what, and when. 12 You can easily enough see how this kind of thing works
by looking no further than your own body. Your body has many parts - limbs,
organs, cells - but no matter how many parts you can name, you're still one
body. It's exactly the same with Christ. 13 By means of his one Spirit, we all
said good-bye to our partial and piecemeal lives. We each used to independently
call our own shots, but then we entered into a large and integrated life in
which he has the final say in everything. (This is what we proclaimed in word
and action when we were baptized.) Each of us is now a part of his resurrection
body, refreshed and sustained at one fountain - his Spirit - where we all come
to drink. The old labels we once used to identify ourselves - labels like Jew
or Greek, slave or free - are no longer useful. We need something larger, more
comprehensive. 14 I want you to think about how all this makes you more
significant, not less. A body isn't just a single part blown up into something
huge. It's all the different-but-similar parts arranged and functioning
together. 15 If Foot said, "I'm not elegant like Hand, embellished with
rings; I guess I don't belong to this body," would that make it so? 16 If
Ear said, "I'm not beautiful like Eye, limpid and expressive; I don't
deserve a place on the head," would you want to remove it from the body?
17 If the body was all eye, how could it hear? If all ear, how could it smell?
18 As it is, we see that God has carefully placed each part of the body right
where he wanted it. 19 But I also want you to think about how this keeps your
significance from getting blown up into self-importance. For no matter how
significant you are, it is only because of what you are a part of. An enormous
eye or a gigantic hand wouldn't be a body, but a monster. 20 What we have is
one body with many parts, each its proper size and in its proper place. No part
is important on its own. 21 Can you imagine Eye telling Hand, "Get lost; I
don't need you"? Or, Head telling Foot, "You're fired; your job has
been phased out"? 22 As a matter of fact, in practice it works the other
way - the "lower" the part, the more basic, and therefore necessary.
You can live without an eye, for instance, but not without a stomach. 23 When
it's a part of your own body you are concerned with, it makes no difference
whether the part is visible or clothed, higher or lower. You give it dignity
and honor just as it is, without comparisons. 24 If anything, you have more
concern for the lower parts than the higher. If you had to choose, wouldn't you
prefer good digestion to full-bodied hair? 25 The way God designed our bodies
is a model for understanding our lives together as a church: every part
dependent on every other part, the parts we mention and the parts we don't, 26
the parts we see and the parts we don't. If one part hurts, every other part is
involved in the hurt, and in the healing. If one part flourishes, every other
part enters into the exuberance. 27 You are Christ's body - that's who you are!
You must never forget this. Only as you accept your part of that body does your
"part" mean anything. 28 You're familiar with some of the parts that
God has formed in his church, which is his "body": apostles prophets
teachers miracle workers healers helpers organizers those who pray in tongues.
29 But it's obvious by now, isn't it, that Christ's church is a complete Body
and not a gigantic, unidimensional Part? It's not all Apostle, not all Prophet,
not all Miracle Worker, 30 not all Healer, not all Prayer in Tongues, not all
Interpreter of Tongues. 31 And yet some of you keep competing for so-called "important"
parts. But now I want to lay out a far better way for you.
1 Corinthians 13 (The Message)
1
If I speak with human eloquence and angelic ecstasy but don't love, I'm nothing
but the creaking of a rusty gate. 2 If I speak God's Word with power, revealing
all his mysteries and making everything plain as day, and if I have faith that
says to a mountain, "Jump," and it jumps, but I don't love, I'm
nothing. 3 If I give everything I own to the poor and even go to the stake to
be burned as a martyr, but I don't love, I've gotten nowhere. So, no matter
what I say, what I believe, and what I do, I'm bankrupt without love. 4 Love
never gives up. Love cares more for others than for self. Love doesn't want
what it doesn't have. Love doesn't strut, Doesn't have a swelled head, 5
Doesn't force itself on others, Isn't always "me first," Doesn't fly
off the handle, Doesn't keep score of the sins of others, 6 Doesn't revel when
others grovel, Takes pleasure in the flowering of truth, 7 Puts up with anything,
Trusts God always, Always looks for the best, Never looks back, But keeps going
to the end. 8 Love never dies. Inspired speech will be over some day; praying
in tongues will end; understanding will reach its limit. 9 We know only a
portion of the truth, and what we say about God is always incomplete. 10 But
when the Complete arrives, our incompletes will be canceled. 11 When I was an
infant at my mother's breast, I gurgled and cooed like any infant. When I grew
up, I left those infant ways for good. 12 We don't yet see things clearly.
We're squinting in a fog, peering through a mist. But it won't be long before
the weather clears and the sun shines bright! We'll see it all then, see it all
as clearly as God sees us, knowing him directly just as he knows us! 13 But for
right now, until that completeness, we have three things to do to lead us
toward that consummation: Trust steadily in God, hope unswervingly, love
extravagantly. And the best of the three is love.
1 Corinthians 14 (The Message)
1
Go after a life of love as if your life depended on it - because it does. Give
yourselves to the gifts God gives you. Most of all, try to proclaim his truth.
2 If you praise him in the private language of tongues, God understands you but
no one else does, for you are sharing intimacies just between you and him. 3
But when you proclaim his truth in everyday speech, you're letting others in on
the truth so that they can grow and be strong and experience his presence with
you. 4 The one who prays using a private "prayer language" certainly
gets a lot out of it, but proclaiming God's truth to the church in its common
language brings the whole church into growth and strength. 5 I want all of you
to develop intimacies with God in prayer, but please don't stop with that. Go
on and proclaim his clear truth to others. It's more important that everyone
have access to the knowledge and love of God in language everyone understands
than that you go off and cultivate God's presence in a mysterious prayer
language - unless, of course, there is someone who can interpret what you are
saying for the benefit of all. 6 Think, friends: If I come to you and all I do
is pray privately to God in a way only he can understand, what are you going to
get out of that? If I don't address you plainly with some insight or truth or
proclamation or teaching, what help am I to you? 7 If musical instruments -
flutes, say, or harps - aren't played so that each note is distinct and in
tune, how will anyone be able to catch the melody and enjoy the music? 8 If the
trumpet call can't be distinguished, will anyone show up for the battle? 9 So
if you speak in a way no one can understand, what's the point of opening your
mouth? 10 There are many languages in the world and they all mean something to
someone. 11 But if I don't understand the language, it's not going to do me
much good. 12 It's no different with you. Since you're so eager to participate
in what God is doing, why don't you concentrate on doing what helps everyone in
the church? 13 So, when you pray in your private prayer language, don't hoard
the experience for yourself. Pray for the insight and ability to bring others
into that intimacy. 14 If I pray in tongues, my spirit prays but my mind lies
fallow, and all that intelligence is wasted. 15 So what's the solution? The
answer is simple enough. Do both. I should be spiritually free and expressive
as I pray, but I should also be thoughtful and mindful as I pray. I should sing
with my spirit, and sing with my mind. 16 If you give a blessing using your
private prayer language, which no one else understands, how can some outsider
who has just shown up and has no idea what's going on know when to say
"Amen"? 17 Your blessing might be beautiful, but you have very
effectively cut that person out of it. 18 I'm grateful to God for the gift of
praying in tongues that he gives us for praising him, which leads to wonderful
intimacies we enjoy with him. I enter into this as much or more than any of
you. 19 But when I'm in a church assembled for worship, I'd rather say five words
that everyone can understand and learn from than say ten thousand that sound to
others like gibberish. 20 To be perfectly frank, I'm getting exasperated with
your infantile thinking. How long before you grow up and use your head - your
adult head? It's all right to have a childlike unfamiliarity with evil; a
simple no is all that's needed there. But there's far more to saying yes to
something. Only mature and well-exercised intelligence can save you from
falling into gullibility. 21 It's written in Scripture that God said, In
strange tongues and from the mouths of strangers I will preach to this people,
but they'll neither listen nor believe. 22 So where does it get you, all this
speaking in tongues no one understands? It doesn't help believers, and it only
gives unbelievers something to gawk at. Plain truth-speaking, on the other
hand, goes straight to the heart of believers and doesn't get in the way of
unbelievers. 23 If you come together as a congregation and some unbelieving
outsiders walk in on you as you're all praying in tongues, unintelligible to
each other and to them, won't they assume you've taken leave of your senses and
get out of there as fast as they can? 24 But if some unbelieving outsiders walk
in on a service where people are speaking out God's truth, the plain words will
bring them up against the truth 25 and probe their hearts. Before you know it,
they're going to be on their faces before God, recognizing that God is among
you. 26 So here's what I want you to do. When you gather for worship, each one
of you be prepared with something that will be useful for all: Sing a hymn,
teach a lesson, tell a story, lead a prayer, provide an insight. 27 If prayers
are offered in tongues, two or three's the limit, and then only if someone is
present who can interpret what you're saying. 28 Otherwise, keep it between God
and yourself. 29 And no more than two or three speakers at a meeting, with the
rest of you listening and taking it to heart. 30 Take your turn, no one person
taking over. 31 Then each speaker gets a chance to say something special from
God, and you all learn from each other. 32 If you choose to speak, you're also
responsible for how and when you speak. 33 When we worship the right way, God
doesn't stir us up into confusion; he brings us into harmony. This goes for all
the churches - no exceptions. 34 Wives must not disrupt worship, talking when
they should be listening, 35 asking questions that could more appropriately be
asked of their husbands at home. God's Book of the law guides our manners and
customs here. Wives have no license to use the time of worship for unwarranted
speaking. 36 Do you - both women and men - imagine that you're a sacred oracle
determining what's right and wrong? Do you think everything revolves around
you? 37 If any one of you thinks God has something for you to say or has
inspired you to do something, pay close attention to what I have written. This
is the way the Master wants it. 38 If you won't play by these rules, God can't
use you. Sorry. 39 Three things, then, to sum this up: When you speak forth
God's truth, speak your heart out. Don't tell people how they should or
shouldn't pray when they're praying in tongues that you don't understand. 40 Be
courteous and considerate in everything.
1 Corinthians 15 (The Message)
1
Friends, let me go over the Message with you one final time - this Message that
I proclaimed and that you made your own; this Message on which you took your
stand 2 and by which your life has been saved. (I'm assuming, now, that your
belief was the real thing and not a passing fancy, that you're in this for good
and holding fast.) 3 The first thing I did was place before you what was placed
so emphatically before me: that the Messiah died for our sins, exactly as
Scripture tells it; 4 that he was buried; that he was raised from death on the
third day, again exactly as Scripture says; 5 that he presented himself alive
to Peter, then to his closest followers, 6 and later to more than five hundred
of his followers all at the same time, most of them still around (although a
few have since died); 7 that he then spent time with James and the rest of
those he commissioned to represent him; 8 and that he finally presented himself
alive to me. 9 It was fitting that I bring up the rear. I don't deserve to be included
in that inner circle, as you well know, having spent all those early years
trying my best to stamp God's church right out of existence. 10 But because God
was so gracious, so very generous, here I am. And I'm not about to let his
grace go to waste. Haven't I worked hard trying to do more than any of the
others? Even then, my work didn't amount to all that much. It was God giving me
the work to do, God giving me the energy to do it. 11 So whether you heard it
from me or from those others, it's all the same: We spoke God's truth and you
entrusted your lives. 12 Now, let me ask you something profound yet troubling.
If you became believers because you trusted the proclamation that Christ is
alive, risen from the dead, how can you let people say that there is no such
thing as a resurrection? 13 If there's no resurrection, there's no living
Christ. 14 And face it - if there's no resurrection for Christ, everything
we've told you is smoke and mirrors, and everything you've staked your life on
is smoke and mirrors. 15 Not only that, but we would be guilty of telling a
string of barefaced lies about God, all these affidavits we passed on to you
verifying that God raised up Christ - sheer fabrications, if there's no
resurrection. 16 If corpses can't be raised, then Christ wasn't, because he was
indeed dead. 17 And if Christ wasn't raised, then all you're doing is wandering
about in the dark, as lost as ever. 18 It's even worse for those who died
hoping in Christ and resurrection, because they're already in their graves. 19
If all we get out of Christ is a little inspiration for a few short years,
we're a pretty sorry lot. 20 But the truth is that Christ has been raised up,
the first in a long legacy of those who are going to leave the cemeteries. 21
There is a nice symmetry in this: Death initially came by a man, and
resurrection from death came by a man. 22 Everybody dies in Adam; everybody
comes alive in Christ. 23 But we have to wait our turn: Christ is first, then
those with him at his Coming, 24 the grand consummation when, after crushing
the opposition, he hands over his kingdom to God the Father. 25 He won't let up
until the last enemy is down - 26 and the very last enemy is death! 27 As the
psalmist said, "He laid them low, one and all; he walked all over them."
When Scripture says that "he walked all over them," it's obvious that
he couldn't at the same time be walked on. 28 When everything and everyone is
finally under God's rule, the Son will step down, taking his place with
everyone else, showing that God's rule is absolutely comprehensive - a perfect
ending! 29 Why do you think people offer themselves to be baptized for those
already in the grave? If there's no chance of resurrection for a corpse, if
God's power stops at the cemetery gates, why do we keep doing things that
suggest he's going to clean the place out someday, pulling everyone up on their
feet alive? 30 And why do you think I keep risking my neck in this dangerous
work? 31 I look death in the face practically every day I live. Do you think I'd
do this if I wasn't convinced of your resurrection and mine as guaranteed by
the resurrected Messiah Jesus? 32 Do you think I was just trying to act heroic
when I fought the wild beasts at Ephesus, hoping it wouldn't be the end of me?
Not on your life! It's resurrection, resurrection, always resurrection, that
undergirds what I do and say, the way I live. If there's no resurrection,
"We eat, we drink, the next day we die," and that's all there is to
it. 33 But don't fool yourselves. Don't let yourselves be poisoned by this
anti-resurrection loose talk. "Bad company ruins good manners." 34
Think straight. Awaken to the holiness of life. No more playing fast and loose
with resurrection facts. Ignorance of God is a luxury you can't afford in times
like these. Aren't you embarrassed that you've let this kind of thing go on as
long as you have? 35 Some skeptic is sure to ask, "Show me how
resurrection works. Give me a diagram; draw me a picture. What does this
'resurrection body' look like?" 36 If you look at this question closely,
you realize how absurd it is. There are no diagrams for this kind of thing. 37
We do have a parallel experience in gardening. You plant a "dead"
seed; soon there is a flourishing plant. There is no visual likeness between seed
and plant. 38 You could never guess what a tomato would look like by looking at
a tomato seed. What we plant in the soil and what grows out of it don't look
anything alike. The dead body that we bury in the ground and the resurrection
body that comes from it will be dramatically different. 39 You will notice that
the variety of bodies is stunning. Just as there are different kinds of seeds,
there are different kinds of bodies - humans, animals, birds, fish - each
unprecedented in its form. 40 You get a hint at the diversity of resurrection
glory by looking at the diversity of bodies not only on earth but in the skies
- sun, moon, stars - all these varieties of beauty and brightness. And we're
only looking at pre-resurrection "seeds" - who can imagine what the
resurrection "plants" will be like! 42 This image of planting a dead
seed and raising a live plant is a mere sketch at best, but perhaps it will
help in approaching the mystery of the resurrection body - but only if you keep
in mind that when we're raised, we're raised for good, alive forever! 43 The
corpse that's planted is no beauty, but when it's raised, it's glorious. Put in
the ground weak, it comes up powerful. 44 The seed sown is natural; the seed
grown is supernatural - same seed, same body, but what a difference from when
it goes down in physical mortality to when it is raised up in spiritual
immortality! 45 We follow this sequence in Scripture: The First Adam received
life, the Last Adam is a life-giving Spirit. 46 Physical life comes first, then
spiritual - 47 a firm base shaped from the earth, a final completion coming out
of heaven. 48 The First Man was made out of earth, and people since then are
earthy; the Second Man was made out of heaven, and people now can be heavenly.
49 In the same way that we've worked from our earthy origins, let's embrace our
heavenly ends. 50 I need to emphasize, friends, that our natural, earthy lives
don't in themselves lead us by their very nature into the kingdom of God. Their
very "nature" is to die, so how could they "naturally" end
up in the Life kingdom? 51 But let me tell you something wonderful, a mystery
I'll probably never fully understand. We're not all going to die - but we are
all going to be changed. 52 You hear a blast to end all blasts from a trumpet, and
in the time that you look up and blink your eyes - it's over. On signal from
that trumpet from heaven, the dead will be up and out of their graves, beyond
the reach of death, never to die again. At the same moment and in the same way,
we'll all be changed. 53 In the resurrection scheme of things, this has to
happen: everything perishable taken off the shelves and replaced by the
imperishable, this mortal replaced by the immortal. 54 Then the saying will
come true: Death swallowed by triumphant Life! 55 Who got the last word, oh,
Death? Oh, Death, who's afraid of you now? 56 It was sin that made death so
frightening and law-code guilt that gave sin its leverage, its destructive
power. 57 But now in a single victorious stroke of Life, all three - sin,
guilt, death - are gone, the gift of our Master, Jesus Christ. Thank God! 58
With all this going for us, my dear, dear friends, stand your ground. And don't
hold back. Throw yourselves into the work of the Master, confident that nothing
you do for him is a waste of time or effort.
1 Corinthians 16 (The Message)
1
Regarding the relief offering for poor Christians that is being collected, you
get the same instructions I gave the churches in Galatia. 2 Every Sunday each
of you make an offering and put it in safekeeping. Be as generous as you can.
When I get there you'll have it ready, and I won't have to make a special
appeal. 3 Then after I arrive, I'll write letters authorizing whomever you
delegate, and send them off to Jerusalem to deliver your gift. 4 If you think it
best that I go along, I'll be glad to travel with them. 5 I plan to visit you
after passing through northern Greece. I won't be staying long there, 6 but
maybe I can stay awhile with you - maybe even spend the winter? Then you could
give me a good send-off, wherever I may be headed next. 7 I don't want to just
drop by in between other "primary" destinations. I want a good, long,
leisurely visit. If the Master agrees, we'll have it! 8 For the present, I'm
staying right here in Ephesus. 9 A huge door of opportunity for good work has
opened up here. (There is also mushrooming opposition.) 10 If Timothy shows up,
take good care of him. Make him feel completely at home among you. He works so
hard for the Master, just as I do. 11 Don't let anyone disparage him. After a
while, send him on to me with your blessing. Tell him I'm expecting him, and
any friends he has with him. 12 About our friend Apollos, I've done my best to
get him to pay you a visit, but haven't talked him into it yet. He doesn't
think this is the right time. But there will be a "right time." 13
Keep your eyes open, hold tight to your convictions, give it all you've got, be
resolute, 14 and love without stopping. 15 Would you do me a favor, friends,
and give special recognition to the family of Stephanas? You know, they were
among the first converts in Greece, and they've put themselves out, serving
Christians ever since then. I want you to 16 honor and look up to people like
that: companions and workers who show us how to do it, giving us something to
aspire to. 17 I want you to know how delighted I am to have Stephanas,
Fortunatus, and Achaicus here with me. They partially make up for your absence!
18 They've refreshed me by keeping me in touch with you. Be proud that you have
people like this among you. 19 The churches here in western Asia send
greetings. Aquila, Priscilla, and the church that meets in their house say
hello. 20 All the friends here say hello. Pass the greetings around with holy
embraces! 21 And I, Paul - in my own handwriting! - send you my regards. 22 If
anyone won't love the Master, throw him out. Make room for the Master! 23 Our
Master Jesus has his arms wide open for you. 24 And I love all of you in the
Messiah, in Jesus.
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