Commentary
Paul carries the holiness argument of chapter 5 into two concrete failures in Corinth: believers dragging fellow believers before pagan courts, and believers treating sexual behavior as negotiable under slogans of freedom. In both halves of the passage, the rebuke turns on what the Corinthians already know: the saints will judge the world, the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom, their bodies belong to the Lord and are destined for resurrection, and those bodies are joined to Christ and indwelt by the Spirit. Ordinary lawsuits and sexual immorality therefore contradict who they are.
Because the Corinthians have been washed, sanctified, justified, joined to Christ, and claimed by God for resurrection life, they must not conduct disputes or use their bodies according to the standards of the surrounding world. That rules out brother-against-brother lawsuits before unbelievers and sexual immorality.
6:1 When any of you has a legal dispute with another, does he dare go to court before the unrighteous rather than before the saints? 6:2 Or do you not know that the saints will judge the world? And if the world is to be judged by you, are you not competent to settle trivial suits? 6:3 Do you not know that we will judge angels? Why not ordinary matters! 6:4 So if you have ordinary lawsuits, do you appoint as judges those who have no standing in the church? 6:5 I say this to your shame! Is there no one among you wise enough to settle disputes between fellow Christians? 6:6 Instead, does a Christian sue a Christian, and do this before unbelievers? 6:7 The fact that you have lawsuits among yourselves demonstrates that you have already been defeated. Why not rather be wronged? Why not rather be cheated? 6:8 But you yourselves wrong and cheat, and you do this to your brothers and sisters! 6:9 Do you not know that the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived! The sexually immoral, idolaters, adulterers, passive homosexual partners, practicing homosexuals, 6:10 thieves, the greedy, drunkards, the verbally abusive, and swindlers will not inherit the kingdom of God. 6:11 Some of you once lived this way. But you were washed, you were sanctified, you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and by the Spirit of our God. 6:12 "All things are lawful for me" - but not everything is beneficial. "All things are lawful for me" - but I will not be controlled by anything. 6:13 "Food is for the stomach and the stomach is for food, but God will do away with both." The body is not for sexual immorality, but for the Lord, and the Lord for the body. 6:14 Now God indeed raised the Lord and he will raise us by his power. 6:15 Do you not know that your bodies are members of Christ? Should I take the members of Christ and make them members of a prostitute? Never! 6:16 Or do you not know that anyone who is united with a prostitute is one body with her? For it is said, "The two will become one flesh." 6:17 But the one united with the Lord is one spirit with him. 6:18 Flee sexual immorality! "Every sin a person commits is outside of the body" - but the immoral person sins against his own body. 6:19 Or do you not know that your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit who is in you, whom you have from God, and you are not your own? 6:20 For you were bought at a price. Therefore glorify God with your body.
Observation notes
- The repeated formula “do you not know” structures the unit and signals that Paul is recalling truths the Corinthians already confess but are failing to apply.
- Verses 1-8 are not a blanket denial that civil courts ever exist for justice; the target is believers prosecuting ordinary disputes against fellow believers before unbelievers.
- Paul’s argument against lawsuits is framed by eschatological dignity: the saints will judge the world and angels, so present “trivial” matters should be resolvable within the church.
- Verse 7 shifts from competence to moral defeat: even if a case could be won legally, the existence of brother-against-brother litigation already manifests failure.
- Verses 9-11 connect the lawsuit problem to a wider pattern of unrighteous conduct; the vice list is not an unrelated insertion but a warning about the moral trajectory of such behavior.
- The three aorist verbs in 6:11 mark decisive conversion realities and stand against returning to pre-conversion patterns.
- From 6:12 onward Paul appears to engage Corinthian catchphrases, then qualifies or overturns them with counter-statements.
- The body is central in 6:13-20: not merely as physical matter, but as belonging to the Lord, destined for resurrection, joined to Christ, indwelt by the Spirit, and therefore morally accountable to God’s claim upon it.
Structure
- 6:1-6: Paul rebukes believers for taking intra-church disputes before unrighteous courts instead of resolving them within the saints.
- 6:7-8: He deepens the rebuke by saying the very presence of such lawsuits is already a defeat and contrasts accepting wrong with actively wronging brothers.
- 6:9-11: A kingdom-warning and identity reminder grounds the rebuke: the unrighteous will not inherit God’s kingdom, but the Corinthians have been decisively cleansed and set apart.
- 6:12-14: Paul cites and corrects Corinthian slogans about liberty and bodily appetites, reorienting the body toward the Lord and resurrection.
- 6:15-17: He argues from union with Christ and Genesis 2:24 that joining oneself to a prostitute creates a rival bodily union incompatible with belonging to Christ.
- 6:18-20: The section climaxes with a direct command to flee sexual immorality, grounded in the body as the Spirit’s temple and in redemption ownership: they were bought at a price, so they must glorify God in their body.
Key terms
adikoi
Strong's: G94
Gloss: unjust, unrighteous
The repeated term links the external tribunal of verse 1 with the moral warning of verses 9-10, showing that Corinthian conduct is drifting toward the very sphere they should not be imitating.
hagioi
Strong's: G40
Gloss: holy ones
The term recalls consecrated identity; Paul’s rebuke depends on the mismatch between their holy status and their present behavior.
kleronomesousin ten basileian theou
Strong's: G2816, G932, G2316
Gloss: receive as inheritance God’s kingdom
This is a real moral warning, not a merely hypothetical label about loss of reward; Paul uses kingdom inheritance language to confront conduct incompatible with saving allegiance to Christ.
apelousasthe
Strong's: G628
Gloss: were washed
The term fits the passage’s purity and bodily themes and anchors ethical exhortation in conversion cleansing rather than in bare moralism.
hegiasthēte
Strong's: G37
Gloss: were set apart as holy
It ties directly to Paul’s appeal that their conduct must reflect belonging to a holy community rather than to the old order.
edikaiōthēte
Strong's: G1344
Gloss: were declared righteous
Placed after the vice list, it shows that their acceptance before God came through Christ and the Spirit, but that this grace does not legitimize returning to unrighteous practice.
Syntactical features
Rhetorical question chain
Textual signal: Repeated interrogatives in 6:1-6, 9, 15-16, 19 with “do you not know” and “why not rather”
Interpretive effect: The syntax is accusatory and corrective rather than exploratory; Paul is pressing admitted truths against inconsistent behavior.
Future indicative grounding present duty
Textual signal: “the saints will judge the world… we will judge angels” in 6:2-3
Interpretive effect: Paul argues from future eschatological role to present communal responsibility, making present court behavior incongruous with future destiny.
Adversative contrast in conversion formula
Textual signal: “and these things some of you were, but you were washed, but you were sanctified, but you were justified” in 6:11
Interpretive effect: The repeated “but” sharply opposes former identity and present status, strengthening the ethical force of the appeal.
Quotation-and-correction pattern
Textual signal: “All things are lawful for me”… “Food for the stomach…” in 6:12-13 followed by Paul’s rebuttals
Interpretive effect: Recognizing slogan material prevents misreading Paul as endorsing libertine maxims and shows that he is dismantling Corinthian misuse of freedom.
Purpose and possession logic
Textual signal: “the body is not for sexual immorality, but for the Lord, and the Lord for the body” and “you are not your own”
Interpretive effect: These compact clauses define teleology and ownership; bodily ethics are governed by belonging, not appetite or autonomy.
Textual critical issues
Middle clause of 6:20
Variants: Some witnesses add “and in your spirit, which are God’s” after “glorify God in your body,” while others end the verse with “in your body.”
Preferred reading: Shorter reading ending with “glorify God in your body.”
Interpretive effect: The longer reading broadens the explicit exhortation, but the shorter reading fits Paul’s immediate bodily focus and leaves the argument unchanged in substance.
Rationale: The shorter reading is better supported and likely prompted the longer expansion by assimilation to a fuller body-and-spirit formula.
Verb form in 6:11 for “washed”
Variants: Some construe the form as middle “you washed yourselves,” while many translations render it passively, “you were washed.”
Preferred reading: Passive sense, “you were washed.”
Interpretive effect: The passive reading better preserves divine agency in conversion and fits the parallel passives “you were sanctified” and “you were justified.”
Rationale: The immediate context centers on what God did for them in the name of Jesus and by the Spirit, not on self-cleansing.
Old Testament background
Genesis 2:24
Connection type: quotation
Note: Quoted in 6:16 to show that sexual union creates a real one-flesh bond; Paul applies the creation text to expose the gravity of union with a prostitute.
Exodus 19:5-6 / Leviticus holiness patterns
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: The saints-language and temple-holiness logic stand in continuity with God’s claim that his people belong to him and must live as holy.
Temple theology in the OT
Connection type: thematic_background
Note: In 6:19 the body as temple of the Holy Spirit draws on the OT pattern that God’s dwelling place is holy and must not be defiled.
Redemption-purchase motifs
Connection type: pattern
Note: “You were bought at a price” echoes the broader biblical redemption pattern in which God’s saving claim establishes covenant ownership and obedience.
Interpretive options
Are verses 1-8 an absolute ban on any Christian recourse to civil courts?
- Yes; believers should never use civil courts in any dispute.
- No; Paul specifically forbids believers from taking ordinary disputes against fellow believers before unbelieving tribunals, not every possible legal appeal in every circumstance.
Preferred option: No; Paul specifically forbids believers from taking ordinary disputes against fellow believers before unbelieving tribunals, not every possible legal appeal in every circumstance.
Rationale: The immediate wording concerns “another” believer, “fellow Christians,” and “ordinary matters,” and the shame lies in brother-against-brother litigation before outsiders despite the church’s capacity to judge internal matters.
How should the vice list and kingdom warning in 6:9-10 function?
- As a warning only about loss of reward or diminished Christian experience.
- As a real eschatological warning that persistent unrighteous practice is incompatible with inheriting God’s kingdom.
Preferred option: As a real eschatological warning that persistent unrighteous practice is incompatible with inheriting God’s kingdom.
Rationale: The language of inheritance is final and exclusionary, and verse 11 does not weaken the warning but grounds hope in a decisive conversion from such former patterns.
Are the statements in 6:12-13 Paul’s own words or Corinthian slogans?
- They are wholly Paul’s assertions.
- They are Corinthian slogans or catchphrases that Paul quotes and then qualifies or corrects.
Preferred option: They are Corinthian slogans or catchphrases that Paul quotes and then qualifies or corrects.
Rationale: The abrupt aphoristic style, repeated quotation pattern, and immediate rebuttals fit Paul’s habit elsewhere in the letter of citing Corinthian claims before correcting them.
What does “one spirit” in 6:17 mean?
- A metaphysical collapse of distinctions between the believer and Christ.
- A real but non-fusional union with the Lord effected by the Spirit, set in contrast to illicit bodily union with a prostitute.
Preferred option: A real but non-fusional union with the Lord effected by the Spirit, set in contrast to illicit bodily union with a prostitute.
Rationale: The context preserves distinction while arguing covenantal and relational union; Paul is not dissolving personal identity but contrasting two kinds of union with moral consequences.
Conner principles audit
context
Relevance: high
Note: Chapter 6 must be read as a continuation of chapter 5’s concern for internal church judgment and holiness, not as detached maxims about courts or sex.
mention_principles
Relevance: high
Note: Paul’s repeated “do you not know” means the stated truths are the controlling interpretive keys; future judgment, kingdom inheritance, union with Christ, and temple identity must govern the reading.
moral
Relevance: high
Note: The unit is ethically direct; attempts to reduce it to mere symbolism or status language fail because Paul issues explicit prohibitions, warnings, and commands grounded in redemption.
christological
Relevance: high
Note: Christ is not backgrounded: bodies are for the Lord, believers are members of Christ, and redemption price belongs to him; bodily ethics flow from relation to Christ.
symbolic_typical_parabolic
Relevance: medium
Note: Temple language has metaphorical force, but the metaphor is not loose; it carries real holiness obligations because God’s indwelling presence makes bodily conduct covenantally significant.
prophetic
Relevance: medium
Note: The future judging of the world and angels and the inheritance warning show that eschatology is being used ethically in the present, not merely as distant speculation.
Theological significance
- Paul refuses any split between spiritual status and bodily conduct; holiness reaches into disputes, sexuality, and the use of the body.
- The future role of the saints gives present disputes a different scale. Those destined to judge the world should not be incapable of settling ordinary cases among themselves.
- Verse 11 holds cleansing, sanctification, and justification together as decisive acts of God that mark a real break with former patterns of unrighteousness.
- Union with Christ means sexual sin is not a private matter of appetite; it misuses members that already belong to Christ.
- Resurrection gives the body enduring significance. Paul’s ethic is not anti-body but ordered by the body’s relation to the risen Lord and its own future raising.
- The Spirit’s indwelling makes the body consecrated space under God's claim, which gives sharp force to the command to glorify God in the body.
Philosophical appreciation
Exegetical and linguistic: The argument advances by repeated collisions between confession and conduct. 'Do you not know' recalls truths the Corinthians already accept, while the quoted slogans in verses 12-13 expose a way of speaking about freedom and appetite that Paul refuses to leave unchallenged.
Biblical theological: The passage binds church order, salvation, union with Christ, resurrection, and the Spirit into one moral argument. Litigation and sexual conduct are not side issues; they are places where redemption must become visible.
Metaphysical: Paul treats the body as ordered toward the Lord rather than as raw material for desire. Embodiment is neither expendable nor morally neutral, because the body stands within creation, redemption, indwelling, and resurrection.
Psychological Spiritual: The slogans suggest self-authorization: if something is permitted, it may be embraced; if a desire is natural, it may be gratified. Paul answers with a different grammar of the self—benefit rather than bare permission, mastery rather than enslavement, belonging rather than autonomy, flight rather than flirtation.
Divine Perspective: God's saving action does not relax moral claims on the body; it establishes them. Those bought at a price and indwelt by the Spirit are reclaimed for holy use and for God's glory.
Category: works_providence_glory
Note: God’s redemptive work establishes rightful claim: he bought his people at a price and therefore calls them to glorify him in their bodies.
Category: revelatory_self_disclosure
Note: God makes his will known through the realities Paul recalls—future judgment, Christ-union, resurrection, and the Spirit’s indwelling—rather than through Corinthian slogans about liberty.
Category: attributes
Note: God’s holiness and righteousness stand behind both the inheritance warning and the temple imagery.
Category: personhood
Note: Through the indwelling Spirit, God relates personally to believers, so bodily conduct is relationally accountable rather than mechanically regulated.
- Believers are justified by grace, yet Paul still warns that the unrighteous will not inherit the kingdom.
- Christian freedom is real, yet what may be claimed as lawful can still be harmful or enslaving.
- The body is mortal, yet it already belongs to the Lord and is destined for resurrection.
- Union with the Lord is spiritual, yet it has unavoidable bodily and sexual consequences.
Enrichment summary
Paul frames both issues inside a corporate and holiness-shaped world. Brother suing brother is not just poor conflict management; it is family shame before outsiders and a sign that the sanctified community is failing to exercise its own wisdom. The sexual argument is not generic moralism either. By quoting Genesis 2:24 and invoking resurrection, Christ-membership, and temple holiness, Paul treats bodily union as morally weighty and covenantally consequential. That double frame guards against two opposite misreadings: turning verses 1-8 into a universal ban on all civil recourse, or shrinking verses 12-20 into a merely private sexual ethic.
Traditions of men check
The assumption that private autonomy governs sexual choices so long as consent is present.
Why it conflicts: Paul grounds sexual ethics in union with Christ, one-flesh reality, temple holiness, and divine ownership rather than in autonomy or consent alone.
Textual pressure point: 6:15-20 argues that the believer is not his own and must glorify God in the body.
Caution: This should not be reduced to a single-issue polemic; Paul’s argument is broader than one modern debate and addresses the whole theology of the body.
The church reflex that serious conflict should be outsourced immediately to secular mechanisms with no meaningful role for congregational wisdom.
Why it conflicts: Paul assumes the church ought to possess enough wisdom and moral seriousness to address ordinary internal disputes among believers.
Textual pressure point: 6:1-6 shames the Corinthians for lacking anyone wise enough to decide between brothers.
Caution: This does not erase lawful civil responsibilities in criminal abuse, state justice, or protection of victims; Paul’s focus is ordinary believer-versus-believer disputes.
The slogan that grace means moral categories like kingdom exclusion no longer function for professing Christians.
Why it conflicts: Paul places a direct inheritance warning in the middle of a grace-saturated letter and ties it to concrete behaviors.
Textual pressure point: 6:9-11 combines “do not be deceived” with the reminder of their cleansing and justification.
Caution: The warning should not be weaponized to deny assurance to every struggling believer; Paul addresses settled unrighteous practice, not the mere presence of temptation.
The idea that the body is spiritually insignificant compared with the soul or inner life.
Why it conflicts: Paul’s argument assigns the body covenantal, christological, pneumatological, and eschatological significance.
Textual pressure point: 6:13-20 repeatedly grounds ethics in the body’s relation to the Lord, resurrection, Christ’s members, and the Spirit’s temple.
Caution: The passage does not idolize bodily life for its own sake; it subordinates the body to the Lord’s purpose and glory.
Thought-world reading
Dynamic: corporate_vs_individual
Why It Matters: In verses 1-8, the repeated brother-against-brother language makes the scandal ecclesial. The dispute is not treated as two isolated individuals asserting rights, but as a breach within the holy community.
Western Misread: Reading the lawsuit rebuke as if Paul objects only to bad publicity or poor strategy.
Interpretive Difference: Paul presses the church toward communal wisdom, peacemaking, and at times the costly willingness to absorb wrong for the sake of the body.
Dynamic: temple_cultic_frame
Why It Matters: In verse 19, 'temple of the Holy Spirit' marks the body as consecrated space. What belongs to God’s dwelling is not available for common use.
Western Misread: Reducing temple language to self-care, health, or a generic affirmation of personal worth.
Interpretive Difference: Paul’s point is holiness and possession: sexual conduct now falls within the logic of worship, desecration, and divine claim.
Idioms and figures
Expression: I say this to your shame
Category: other
Explanation: Paul uses the language of public disgrace to expose conduct unfitting for a sanctified community. The rebuke is meant to awaken moral recognition, not merely to vent irritation.
Interpretive effect: It sharpens verses 1-6 by showing that the problem is not only procedural failure but communal dishonor.
Expression: The two will become one flesh
Category: metonymy
Explanation: The Genesis quotation treats sexual union as a real embodied bond rather than a casual act without durable meaning. 'Flesh' names the person in bodily union.
Interpretive effect: It blocks the idea that sex with a prostitute is morally disposable or merely physical.
Expression: Flee sexual immorality
Category: hyperbole
Explanation: The imperative is rhetorically absolute: do not linger near porneia, rationalize it, or test your limits around it. Create distance from it.
Interpretive effect: The command leaves little room for libertine appeals to inward freedom while bodily conduct remains compromised.
Application implications
- Churches should develop wise, credible ways to address ordinary disputes among believers, so that conflicts are handled justly without brother turning against brother before outsiders.
- In conflict, believers should weigh not only their legal rights but also Paul’s hard question: would it be better to suffer loss than to damage the fellowship and witness of the church?
- The warning of verses 9-10 should be used pastorally to summon repentance from settled unrighteous practice, while verse 11 should be used to hold out cleansing, sanctification, and justification in Christ.
- Claims of Christian liberty should be tested by the two counters Paul supplies: Is it beneficial, and will it master me?
- Sexual ethics should be taught from the passage’s own logic—union with Christ, resurrection, and the Spirit’s indwelling—rather than from social embarrassment or consequence management alone.
Enrichment applications
- Church peacemaking should treat unresolved internal conflict as a body issue, not merely a rights issue; congregations need trusted processes for wise adjudication.
- Sexual ethics should be framed as an ethic of belonging: Christians refuse uses of the body that contradict Christ-union and the Spirit’s indwelling.
- Where believers insist on the full assertion of personal rights, Paul’s question in verse 7 exposes how quickly entitlement can outrun love for the church.
Warnings
- Do not read verses 9-10 apart from verse 11; warning and grace are deliberately joined.
- Do not turn verses 1-8 into a simple legal policy for every church-state question; Paul addresses ordinary disputes between believers.
- Do not treat the slogans in verses 12-13 as Paul’s own straightforward teaching; his rebuttals are part of the meaning.
- Do not spiritualize temple language until bodily conduct becomes secondary; Paul argues in the opposite direction.
- Do not use the inheritance warning to deny repentance and restoration; verse 11 explicitly recalls transformed former sinners.
Enrichment warnings
- Do not use verses 1-8 to suppress lawful civil action in cases of crime, abuse, or victim protection; Paul is addressing ordinary disputes between believers.
- Do not wield the vice list against repentant strugglers while ignoring verse 11; the passage targets ongoing unrighteous practice and calls sinners to real change grounded in God’s saving action.
- Do not reduce the body language to a loose symbol; the force of the argument depends on actual embodied conduct.
Interpretive misread risks
Misreading: Paul forbids every possible Christian use of civil courts in any circumstance.
Why It Happens: Readers universalize the rebuke without attending to the local features: ordinary disputes, fellow believers, and public litigation before unbelieving tribunals.
Correction: The passage directly addresses ordinary intra-believer cases and assumes the church should be able to handle them. It does not directly settle every question about criminal acts, protection of victims, or other lawful state functions.
Misreading: Verses 9-10 warn only about reduced reward, not exclusion from the kingdom.
Why It Happens: Some readers soften the warning because verse 11 immediately speaks of washing, sanctification, and justification.
Correction: The warning itself is exclusionary and should be read as real. Verse 11 does not cancel it; it explains how former practitioners can truly belong to Christ.
Misreading: Temple language mainly teaches bodily wellness or generalized self-respect.
Why It Happens: Modern readers often hear sacred-space language through therapeutic or health-oriented categories.
Correction: Paul’s concern is consecration. The body is sacred because it belongs to God and is indwelt by his Spirit, which makes sexual immorality a matter of desecration, not merely poor self-management.
Misreading: Because Paul’s example is prostitution, the theological logic applies only to that one case.
Why It Happens: The argument becomes narrowed to the immediate illustration.
Correction: Prostitution is the concrete case, but the reasons Paul gives—one-flesh union, membership in Christ, resurrection, and temple holiness—extend beyond that single form of sexual immorality.