Today, I am reading and commenting on 1 Corinthians 1-4.
It has always seemed to me that Paul makes the primary point in this passage that we will rarely convince unbelievers to become Believers by the wisdom of our arguments. In fact, he argues that the Gospel is foolish to those who are unbelievers. Only after we have been touched by the Holy Spirit do we begin to understand the wisdom of God and the Gospel. Having said that I want to note that Paul makes this point in the middle of explaining why we should not make a big deal about which teacher of the faith we follow. I was not sure where I was going with this, but as I wrote I thought about those nondenominational congregations which explain why they are nondenominational by referencing this passage. Every time I hear someone make that claim I think about the fact that they are failing to read the final phrase of verse 12 in chapter 1, which reads, “and still others say, ‘I follow Christ.”‘” Paul makes the point that we should not try to hold ourselves up as better than others because we follow the teachings of this person, or of that person. Rather than seeking out how studying the writings of Paul, or Martin Luther, or C.S. Lewis can make us wiser than others, let us seek how studying those writings can make us better servants of Christ than we were yesterday.
I want to highlight that many people try to use this passage to convince others to not hold their fellow Believers to a standard of behavior. Yet later in this very same letter Paul calls on the Believers in Corinth to call out a member of their group for his sinful behavior.
I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.