Commentary
Paul addresses a publicly known incestuous union that the Corinthian assembly has tolerated with pride instead of grief. He orders the gathered church, acting in the name and power of the Lord Jesus, to remove the offender from fellowship. The rationale unfolds through the imagery of leaven and Passover: tolerated evil spreads, and a church made 'unleavened' through Christ's sacrifice must purge what contradicts that identity. Paul then clarifies the scope of separation: Christians are not called to withdraw from immoral people in the world, but they must refuse recognized fellowship to a professing believer who persists in open, defiling sin. The chapter draws a firm line between those inside, whom the church must judge in such cases, and those outside, whose judgment belongs to God.
Paul requires the Corinthian church to remove an openly immoral professing believer from its fellowship because the gathered church must judge persistent scandalous sin within its own body, preserve its holiness in keeping with its identity in Christ, and leave the judgment of outsiders to God.
5:1 It is actually reported that sexual immorality exists among you, the kind of immorality that is not permitted even among the Gentiles, so that someone is cohabiting with his father's wife. 5:2 And you are proud! Shouldn't you have been deeply sorrowful instead and removed the one who did this from among you? 5:3 For even though I am absent physically, I am present in spirit. And I have already judged the one who did this, just as though I were present. 5:4 When you gather together in the name of our Lord Jesus, and I am with you in spirit, along with the power of our Lord Jesus, 5:5 turn this man over to Satan for the destruction of the flesh, so that his spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord. 5:6 Your boasting is not good. Don't you know that a little yeast affects the whole batch of dough? 5:7 Clean out the old yeast so that you may be a new batch of dough - you are, in fact, without yeast. For Christ, our Passover lamb, has been sacrificed. 5:8 So then, let us celebrate the festival, not with the old yeast, the yeast of vice and evil, but with the bread without yeast, the bread of sincerity and truth. 5:9 I wrote you in my letter not to associate with sexually immoral people. 5:10 In no way did I mean the immoral people of this world, or the greedy and swindlers and idolaters, since you would then have to go out of the world. 5:11 But now I am writing to you not to associate with anyone who calls himself a Christian who is sexually immoral, or greedy, or an idolater, or verbally abusive, or a drunkard, or a swindler. Do not even eat with such a person. 5:12 For what do I have to do with judging those outside? Are you not to judge those inside? 5:13 But God will judge those outside. Remove the evil person from among you.
Observation notes
- The initial charge is introduced as public report ('actually reported'), which indicates known, not hidden, sin; the issue is not rumor-management but communal response to manifest evil.
- The offense is described concretely as a man having 'his father's wife,' language that points to an incestuous union and likely avoids calling her his mother directly, suggesting a stepmother while still invoking the Levitical prohibition.
- The rebuke falls not only on the offender but on the congregation: 'you are proud' contrasts sharply with the mourning that should have followed.
- Paul's earlier warning in 4:18-21 about coming with a rod is now enacted in written form through disciplinary command.
- Paul distinguishes kinds of judgment: he rejects premature, self-exalting judgment in 4:5, yet here commands corporate judgment regarding overt sin inside the church; the contexts are different.
- The phrase 'when you gather' shows that discipline is an ecclesial act, not merely a private apostolic opinion.
- In the name of our Lord Jesus' and 'with the power of our Lord Jesus' place the action under Christ's authority rather than mere social exclusion.
- The purpose clause in 5:5 introduces a severe but not merely punitive aim: the disciplinary act seeks an outcome related to final salvation on 'the day of the Lord.
- The leaven image interprets tolerated sin as contagious in communal effect, not merely private in consequence.
- Paul's command to 'clean out the old leaven' is immediately qualified by 'you are in fact unleavened,' so the imperative rests on an indicative identity already given in Christ.
- The reference to Christ as 'our Passover' ties congregational purity to redemptive accomplishment, not to bare institutional hygiene.
- The vice list in 5:11 broadens the principle beyond sexual sin; greed, idolatry, reviling, drunkenness, and swindling equally warrant disciplinary separation when joined to a Christian profession.
- Do not even eat with such a person' likely includes ordinary table fellowship and certainly bears significance for shared Christian fellowship; in Corinth the social meaning of meals heightens the force of the command.
- The inside/outside distinction controls the whole paragraph: Paul's concern is not cultural withdrawal but faithful boundary-keeping within the church.
Structure
- 5:1-2: Paul reports the incestuous case and rebukes the church's proud rather than mournful response.
- 5:3-5: Paul renders an apostolic judgment and directs the gathered assembly to hand the man over to Satan under the Lord Jesus' authority for disciplinary destruction of the flesh with a saving aim.
- 5:6-8: Paul grounds the command in the leaven metaphor and Passover imagery: tolerated evil corrupts the whole lump, while the church's identity in Christ calls for purging old leaven.
- 5:9-11: Paul clarifies an earlier letter: separation is not from immoral people in the world generally, but from anyone bearing the Christian name while practicing notorious sin.
- 5:12-13: Paul states the governing boundary: the church judges insiders, God judges outsiders, therefore the evil person must be removed from among them.
Key terms
porneia
Strong's: G4202
Gloss: sexual immorality
It frames the case as moral defilement incompatible with Christian identity and signals that the issue is not merely unconventional behavior but covenantally disordered sexuality.
pephysiomenoi
Strong's: G5448
Gloss: inflated, arrogant
The term links this chapter to the earlier exposure of Corinthian arrogance; their failure to discipline grows from the same self-deceived boasting already condemned in chapters 3-4.
airo
Strong's: G142
Gloss: take away, remove
The word marks discipline as an actual exclusion from fellowship, not mere verbal disapproval.
paradounai to Satana
Strong's: G3860, G4567
Gloss: deliver over to Satan
The phrase indicates severe covenantal discipline and shows that exclusion from the church has spiritual seriousness, while still being oriented toward possible restoration rather than final damnation.
olethros
Strong's: G3639
Gloss: ruin, destruction
Its object is not the annihilation of the person but the breaking of fleshly rebellion; the exact mode is debated, but the disciplinary severity is unmistakable.
sarx
Strong's: G4561
Gloss: flesh
Here it most naturally points to the sinful, self-indulgent sphere or the offender's fleshly mode of life, not simply the physical body in abstraction.
Syntactical features
Rhetorical question sequence
Textual signal: "And you are proud! Shouldn't you have been deeply sorrowful...?"; "Don't you know...?"; "Are you not to judge those inside?"
Interpretive effect: The questions press the Corinthians toward conclusions they should already recognize, exposing moral inconsistency rather than opening neutral inquiry.
Purpose clause
Textual signal: "so that his spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord"
Interpretive effect: This clause guards the disciplinary act from being read as sheer vengeance; the exclusion aims at an ultimate salvific outcome through severe correction.
Imperative grounded in indicative
Textual signal: "Clean out the old yeast so that you may be a new batch... you are, in fact, without yeast"
Interpretive effect: Paul's command arises from the church's already-established status in Christ; holiness is demanded as congruent with redemption, not as an independent basis for it.
Metaphorical explanation through apposition
Textual signal: "not with the old yeast, the yeast of vice and evil, but with the bread without yeast, the bread of sincerity and truth"
Interpretive effect: Paul interprets the leaven figure explicitly so the imagery is ethical and communal, not merely ceremonial.
Contrastive boundary markers
Textual signal: "those of this world" / "anyone who calls himself a Christian"; "those outside" / "those inside"
Interpretive effect: These contrasts define the scope of church discipline and prevent the command from becoming monastic withdrawal from society.
Textual critical issues
Reading in 5:5 concerning the Lord reference
Variants: Some witnesses read 'in the day of the Lord Jesus,' while others have shortened forms such as 'in the day of the Lord.'
Preferred reading: in the day of the Lord Jesus
Interpretive effect: The longer reading makes the eschatological reference explicitly Christological, though the shorter reading leaves the sense substantially the same.
Rationale: The longer reading is strongly attested and fits Paul's common way of speaking about final judgment and salvation in explicitly Christ-centered terms.
Wording in 5:11 regarding association
Variants: Minor variation appears around whether the command is 'not to associate' and/or 'not even to eat' with such a person.
Preferred reading: retain both the prohibition of association and the added prohibition of eating
Interpretive effect: The fuller reading preserves Paul's escalating clarification: general social fellowship is restricted, and table fellowship in particular is excluded.
Rationale: The combination best explains the transmitted forms and fits the rhetorical tightening of Paul's argument.
Old Testament background
Leviticus 18:8; 20:11
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The union with 'his father's wife' matches the prohibited uncovering of a father's nakedness. Paul does not quote the law directly, but the formulation strongly evokes Israel's incest prohibitions as moral background.
Exodus 12:15-20; 13:6-7
Connection type: pattern
Note: The command to remove leaven and the reference to Passover supply the controlling redemptive pattern for purging tolerated evil from the covenant community.
Deuteronomy 13:5; 17:7; 19:19; 21:21; 22:21, 24; 24:7
Connection type: quotation
Note: 'Remove the evil person from among you' echoes the Deuteronomic purge formula, applying covenant-community holiness logic to the church.
Interpretive options
Meaning of 'deliver this man to Satan for the destruction of the flesh'
- Excommunication into the realm outside the church, where severe affliction may break the man's sinful life and lead to repentance.
- A miraculous apostolic judgment involving physical illness or even death as the means by which the flesh is destroyed.
- A purely metaphorical statement for strong rebuke without any formal exclusion from fellowship.
Preferred option: Excommunication into the realm outside the church, where severe affliction may break the man's sinful life and lead to repentance.
Rationale: The context centers on removal 'from among you,' gathering as a church, and distinction between inside and outside. Physical suffering may be involved, but formal exclusion from the church's sphere is the primary sense. The purely metaphorical option fails to account for the concrete commands.
Meaning of 'destruction of the flesh'
- The destruction of the sinful fleshly orientation so that the offender is brought to repentance.
- Physical ruin or illness, possibly even death, with the spirit saved eschatologically.
- Total loss of salvation or final condemnation.
Preferred option: The destruction of the sinful fleshly orientation so that the offender is brought to repentance.
Rationale: The saving purpose clause pushes away from final condemnation. Given Paul's usage of 'flesh' and the restorative aim of discipline, the phrase most naturally refers to decisive breaking of sinful rebellion, though bodily affliction may be an instrument.
Force of 'do not even eat with such a person'
- It forbids participation in the Lord's Table specifically.
- It forbids ordinary social meals as well as Christian fellowship meals, making exclusion publicly visible.
- It is a hyperbolic way of saying to disapprove inwardly, not to alter actual fellowship.
Preferred option: It forbids ordinary social meals as well as Christian fellowship meals, making exclusion publicly visible.
Rationale: In the flow of the paragraph Paul is defining practical separation from a professing believer under discipline. Restricting it only to the Lord's Table is too narrow, while taking it as inward disapproval evacuates the command of force.
Conner principles audit
context
Relevance: high
Note: The passage must be read against 3:16-17 and 4:18-21. The church is God's holy temple, and Paul's threatened discipline now takes concrete form. This prevents reading chapter 5 as an isolated procedural note.
moral
Relevance: high
Note: The text treats the incestuous union and the wider vice list as real moral evils, not culturally relative taboos. This guards against reframing the passage as merely a concern for reputation management.
christological
Relevance: high
Note: Christ's authority and Christ our Passover control the unit. Discipline is not autonomous institutional power but action under the Lord Jesus and in light of his sacrifice.
symbolic_typical_parabolic
Relevance: medium
Note: The leaven and Passover imagery is figurative, but Paul interprets the figure himself. The symbolism serves ethical and ecclesial purification rather than speculative typology.
prophetic
Relevance: medium
Note: The phrase 'the day of the Lord Jesus' introduces an eschatological horizon. Present discipline is shaped by future judgment and salvation, which prevents both laxity and hopeless severity.
Theological significance
- Church holiness appears here as a necessary consequence of belonging to Christ, not as optional institutional tidiness.
- The gathered assembly bears real responsibility to judge manifest, persistent sin within its own fellowship, while leaving the judgment of outsiders to God.
- Paul ties moral purification directly to Christ's death: because Christ our Passover has been sacrificed, the church must remove the 'old leaven' it is tolerating.
- Discipline is severe, but its stated aim is not simple expulsion; Paul frames it in view of the offender's possible salvation on the day of the Lord.
- The church is treated as a bounded holy community under the authority of Jesus, so membership and table fellowship carry moral weight.
- The passage gives the church a provisional judicial task regarding insiders without collapsing that task into God's final judgment.
Philosophical appreciation
Exegetical and linguistic: The unit moves from scandal report, to judicial command, to metaphorical rationale, to boundary clarification. That progression shows that Paul's language of removal is not impulsive but argued: concrete case, apostolic judgment, theological symbolism, then principle. The inside/outside contrasts and leaven imagery make moral tolerance a communal epistemic failure as well as an ethical one.
Biblical theological: The passage places the church within the moral logic of the redeemed people of God. Exodus-Passover imagery and the Deuteronomic purge formula are not mechanically transferred, but recontextualized around Christ's sacrifice and the gathered assembly. The result is continuity in holiness and discontinuity in covenant administration.
Metaphysical: Paul assumes that moral evil is not self-contained. Sin, when normalized inside the covenant community, has a diffusive quality like leaven. He also assumes that the church is a real spiritual sphere under Christ's authority, so exclusion from it has genuine spiritual consequence, not merely sociological effect.
Psychological Spiritual: The Corinthians' boasting reveals how pride can anesthetize grief over sin. The passage exposes a community capable of confusing permissiveness with maturity. Discipline, then, addresses both the offender's fleshly rebellion and the congregation's distorted moral sensibilities.
Divine Perspective: God values the holiness of his people and distinguishes between his present dealings with the church and his final judgment of the world. The Lord Jesus is not a passive emblem for church life; his name and power govern the assembly's action, and his future day gives the act its horizon.
Category: character
Note: God's holiness appears in the demand that evil be removed from the midst of his people.
Category: works_providence_glory
Note: Christ's sacrificial work as Passover grounds the church's purified identity and practical obedience.
Category: revelatory_self_disclosure
Note: God discloses his will for communal holiness through apostolic instruction rather than leaving the church to social instinct.
Category: personhood
Note: The Lord Jesus exercises personal authority over the gathered church, whose actions are to be undertaken in his name and power.
- The church must practice real judgment inside its fellowship while refusing a self-righteous posture toward outsiders.
- Discipline is severe enough to involve handing one over to Satan, yet its stated goal remains salvation rather than mere expulsion.
- Believers are already 'unleavened' in Christ, yet they must actively purge old leaven in conduct.
Enrichment summary
Paul treats the incest case as a matter of covenantal contamination within the assembly, not merely private immorality. The commands to remove leaven, refuse shared meals, and judge those 'inside' mark the church's boundaries as a holy people shaped by Christ's Passover sacrifice. On that reading, 'deliver to Satan' is best understood as formal exclusion from the church's sphere under the authority of Jesus, with a severe but restorative purpose. Some interpreters also allow that bodily affliction may accompany that exclusion, but the chapter's clearest emphasis falls on ecclesial removal and hoped-for repentance.
Traditions of men check
The slogan that love never excludes anyone from church fellowship.
Why it conflicts: Paul treats exclusion from fellowship as an act required by love for the church and potentially for the sinner's salvation.
Textual pressure point: Verses 2, 5, 11, and 13 command removal, non-association, and a saving aim within the same argument.
Caution: This should not be used to justify harshness over minor disagreements or unproven accusations; the case here is public, grave, and persistent.
The assumption that Christians must never judge because Jesus and Paul forbid judgment.
Why it conflicts: Paul explicitly commands the church to judge those inside in cases of manifest sin.
Textual pressure point: Verses 3, 12, and 13 distinguish proper ecclesial judgment from God's judgment of outsiders and from premature judgment of hidden motives.
Caution: The passage does not authorize censoriousness, omniscience about motives, or domination by leaders; it addresses concrete conduct within the church.
The idea that holiness concerns only private spirituality, not corporate boundaries or membership practice.
Why it conflicts: Paul argues that tolerated sin leavens the whole lump and therefore the congregation must act corporately.
Textual pressure point: Verses 6-8 and the repeated plural address show communal contamination and communal responsibility.
Caution: Corporate holiness must not eclipse the gospel's welcome to repentant sinners; the target is unrepentant profession joined to open sin.
Thought-world reading
Dynamic: covenantal_identity
Why It Matters: The unit echoes Israel's purge-of-evil and Passover patterns, so tolerated scandal is not framed as one member's private failure but as a contradiction of the whole community's holy identity. 'You are unleavened' means the church must act in line with what Christ's sacrifice has made it.
Western Misread: Reading the chapter as if Paul were only protecting institutional reputation or managing one man's sex life.
Interpretive Difference: Discipline becomes a covenantal holiness act grounded in redemption, not mere damage control or moral outrage.
Dynamic: corporate_vs_individual
Why It Matters: The leaven image and the repeated plural address make the congregation itself a moral agent. The church sins by boasting and by failing to mourn and remove the offender.
Western Misread: Treating the text as though only the immoral man is under rebuke while the rest of the church remains neutral observers.
Interpretive Difference: The passage confronts congregational complicity: refusing discipline is itself a form of disorder that endangers the body's holiness.
Idioms and figures
Expression: has his father's wife
Category: idiom
Explanation: This wording reflects forbidden-union language shaped by Levitical categories. It likely points to a stepmother rather than biological mother, but the main force is that the relationship falls under incest prohibition and so carries covenantal defilement.
Interpretive effect: It prevents the case from being softened into a merely unconventional relationship or a breach of local custom.
Expression: a little yeast leavens the whole batch
Category: metaphor
Explanation: Leaven functions as a compact image for a tolerated corrupting presence whose effect spreads through the community. In this context Paul applies the figure ethically and corporately, not as a general proverb about influence detached from Passover imagery.
Interpretive effect: It shows why inaction is impossible: the issue is communal contamination, not isolated vice.
Expression: Christ our Passover has been sacrificed... let us celebrate the festival
Category: metaphor
Explanation: Paul is not mainly commanding calendrical observance but reworking Passover and unleavened-bread imagery around Christ's death and the church's holy life. The festival language describes an ongoing redeemed-community existence marked by sincerity and truth.
Interpretive effect: It guards against both flattening the imagery into bare symbolism and over-literalizing it into a festival-keeping command here.
Expression: deliver this man to Satan
Category: other
Explanation: The phrase most naturally denotes formal exclusion from the church's sphere into the world outside, conceived as Satan's domain in contrast to Christ's gathered people. A strong conservative secondary reading allows that such exclusion may involve divinely permitted bodily affliction, but the core meaning is ecclesial expulsion with severe spiritual consequences.
Interpretive effect: It preserves the gravity of church discipline without turning the phrase into either empty rhetoric or an automatic death sentence.
Expression: do not even eat with such a person
Category: metonymy
Explanation: Shared meals in the ancient Mediterranean world signaled fellowship and recognized social bonds. Paul uses meal refusal as a visible expression that a professing believer's open rebellion is incompatible with affirmed communion.
Interpretive effect: It rules out reducing the command to inward disapproval while also showing that Paul is regulating fellowship boundaries, not demanding total avoidance of unbelievers.
Application implications
- Churches should not treat notorious, publicly known sexual sin among members as a merely private matter; the body must respond with grief, truthfulness, and ordered discipline.
- Leaders and congregations should distinguish engagement with unbelievers in the world from fellowship with a professing believer who persists in scandalous sin.
- Discipline should be carried out as a gathered-church act under Christ's authority, not as private retaliation, gossip, or informal ostracism.
- The command to purge leaven warns churches against protecting image, status, or a reputation for tolerance at the expense of holiness.
- Because Paul grounds the action in Christ's Passover sacrifice, discipline should aim at repentance and restoration rather than hopeless rejection.
Enrichment applications
- Church discipline should be framed as the congregation guarding its holy identity in Christ, not as leaders preserving control or brand image.
- A church that prides itself on tolerance while refusing grief over public, entrenched sin falls under this text's rebuke, not its approval.
- Table fellowship should be taken seriously as a sign of recognized communion; churches should not communicate spiritual solidarity where the gospel is being openly denied in conduct by a professing member.
Warnings
- Do not flatten 'deliver to Satan' into either automatic physical death or a vague figure of speech; the phrase points first to severe ecclesial exclusion and may include afflictive consequences, but it is governed by the saving purpose clause.
- Do not use this passage to justify withdrawal from unbelievers; verses 9-10 explicitly reject that move.
- Do not confuse judging overt conduct within the church with claiming authority over hidden motives; the distinction from 4:5 still matters here.
- Do not turn the Passover imagery into an elaborate allegorical system; Paul uses it in a focused way to explain communal purification in light of Christ's sacrifice.
- Do not generalize this unit into a warrant for authoritarian discipline detached from public knowledge, due process, and gathered-church action in the name of Jesus.
Enrichment warnings
- Do not transfer Deuteronomy's civil penalties directly into church practice; Paul carries forward covenant-holiness logic, but the sanction here is exclusion from fellowship.
- Do not build a full doctrine of festival observance from the Passover language in this unit; Paul's point is redeemed holiness through Christ.
- Do not overstate Second Temple parallels for 'deliver to Satan'; the phrase is specifically Pauline and must be governed by the chapter's own inside/outside logic.
Interpretive misread risks
Misreading: Using 'judge not' language to cancel Paul's command for the church to judge insiders.
Why It Happens: Modern readers collapse all forms of judgment into one category and ignore Paul's distinction between hidden motives and manifest conduct.
Correction: In this chapter Paul requires corporate judgment of open, scandalous sin within the church while leaving outsiders to God's judgment.
Misreading: Treating 'deliver to Satan' as either certainly physical death or merely a dramatic way of saying 'criticize him strongly.'
Why It Happens: The phrase is striking and readers often rush to the most sensational or the least offensive option.
Correction: The strongest reading is formal exclusion from the church under Christ's authority, with a restorative aim; bodily affliction may be a possible consequence, but the text's clearest emphasis is excommunication.
Misreading: Applying the passage as a program for social withdrawal from immoral non-Christians.
Why It Happens: Verses 9-11 can be read selectively without Paul's explicit clarification.
Correction: Paul expressly says the church is not to exit the world; the boundary applies to anyone who bears the Christian name while persisting in notorious sin.
Misreading: Reducing the issue to sexual sin alone.
Why It Happens: The chapter begins with an incest case, so the broader vice list can be overlooked.
Correction: Paul extends the disciplinary principle to greed, idolatry, reviling, drunkenness, and swindling when joined to a Christian profession.