I am using the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.
Today, I am reading and commenting on 1 Corinthians 5-8
I do not know that I ever noticed the connection between Paul’s teaching about Believers going to court against each other and what he writes before and after. The entire passage follows a natural progression from one topic to another, with a real overlap in the guiding principle behind most of Paul’s instructions here. Paul starts off by telling the Church in Corinth that they have someone among them who is doing something that even the pagans living around them recognize as wrong. But instead of confronting this Believer with his sin, the Church was bragging about their tolerance. Paul instructs them to tell this man that what he was doing was wrong. Then Paul takes the same idea, that the Church has people who can recognize when someone is doing wrong, and applies it to situations where business deals between believers go wrong. If you think another believer has cheated you, take it to the Church. Let the Church appoint someone knowledgeable in such matters examine the facts of your disagreement and render a decision on how to resolve it. If the other party is unwilling to accept the Church’s judgement, let yourself be cheated rather than exposing the name of Christ to ridicule before unbelievers. Paul does not say it, and we should be extremely careful before going there, but he seems to hint that if someone in a dispute refuses to accept the Church’s judgement of the matter they should, perhaps, be treated as the man he mentioned at the beginning of the passage.