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FORNICATION
IN remonstrating with the Corinthians for their litigiousness, Paul
was forcibly reminded how imperfectly his converts understood the
moral requirements of the kingdom of God. Apparently, too, he had
reason to believe that they were not only content to remain on a low
moral plane, but actually quoted some of his own favourite sayings
in
defence of immoral practices. After warning them, therefore, that
only those who were sanctified could belong to the kingdom of God
and
specifying certain kinds of wrong-doing which must forever be
excluded from that kingdom, he goes on to explain how they had
misapprehended him if they thought that any principle of his could
give colour to immorality. The Corinthians had apparently learned to
argue that if, as Paul had so often and emphatically told them, all
things were lawful to them, then this commonest of Greek indulgences
was lawful; if abstaining from the meat which had been killed in a
heathen temple was a matter of moral indifference which Christians
might or might not practise, as they pleased, then this other common
accompaniment of idolatry was also a matter of indifference and not
in itself wrong.
To understand this Corinthian obliquity of moral vision it must be
borne in mind that licentious rites were a common accompaniment of
pagan worship, and especially in Corinth idolatry might have been
briefly described as the performance of Balaam’s instructions to the
Israelites: the eating of things sacrificed to idols and the
committing of fornication. The temples were often scenes of revelry
and debauchery such as happily have become incredible to a modern
mind. But not at once could men emerging from a religion so
slenderly
connected with morality apprehend what Christianity required of
them.
When they abandoned the temple worship, were they also to abstain
from eating the flesh offered for sale in the open market, and which
had first been sacrificed to an idol? Might they not by partaking of
such flesh become partakers in the sin of idolatry? To this Paul
replied, Do not too scrupulously inquire into the previous history
of
your dinner; the meat has no moral taint; all things are lawful for
you. This was reasonable; but then how about the other accompaniment
of idolatry? Was it also a thing of indifference? Can we apply the
same reasoning to it? It was this insinuation which called forth the
emphatic condemnation which Paul utters in this paragraph.
The great principle of Christian liberty, "All things are lawful for
me," Paul now sees he must guard against abuse by adding, "But all
things are not expedient." The law and its modification are fully
explained in a subsequent passage of the Epistle. {1Co 8 10:23,
etc.} Here it may be enough to say that Paul seeks to impress on his
readers that the question of duty is not answered by simply
ascertaining what is lawful; we must also ask whether the practice
or
act contemplated is expedient. Though it may be impossible to prove
that this or that practice is wrong in every case, we have still to
ask, Does it advance what is good in us; is its bearing on society
good or evil; will it in present circumstances and in the instance
we
contemplate give rise to misunderstandings and evil thoughts? The
Christian is a law to himself; he has an internal guide that sets
him
above external rules. Very true; but that guide leads all those who
possess it to a higher life than the law leads to, and proves its
presence by teaching a man to consider, not how much indulgence he
may enjoy without transgressing the letter of the law, but how he
can
most advantageously use his time and best forward what is highest in
himself and in others.
Again, "all things are lawful for me"; all things are in my power.
Yes, but for that very reason "I will not be brought under the power
of any." "The reasonable use of nay liberty cannot go the length of
involving my own loss of it." I am free from the law; I will
not on that account become the slave of indulgence. As Carlyle puts
it, "enjoying things which are pleasant—that is not the evil; it is
the reducing of our moral self to slavery by them that is. Let a man
assert withal that he is king over his habitudes; that he could and
would shake them off on cause shown: this is an excellent law."
There are several practices and habits which no one would call
immoral or sinful, but which enslave a man quite as much as worse
habits. He is no longer a free man; he is uneasy and restless, and
cannot settle to his work until he obeys the craving he has created.
And it is the very lawfulness of these indulgences which has
ensnared
him. Had they been sinful, the Christian man would not have indulged
in them; but being in his power, they have now assumed power over
him. They have power to compel him to waste his time, his money,
sometimes even his health. He alone attains the true dignity and
freedom of the Christian man who can say, with Paul, "I know both
how to be full and to be hungry, both to abound and to suffer need;
All things are in my power, but I will not be brought under the
power
of any."
Paul then proceeds more explicitly to apply these principles to the
matter in hand. The Corinthians argued that if meats were morally
indifferent, a man being morally neither the better nor the worse
for
eating food which had been offered in an idol’s temple, so also a
man
was neither better nor worse for fornication. To expose the error of
this reasoning Paul draws a remarkable distinction between the
digestive, nutritive organs of the body and the body as a whole.
Paul
believed that the body was an essential part of human nature, and
that in the future life the natural body would give place to the
spiritual body. He believed also that the spiritual body was
connected with, and had its birthplace in, the natural body, so that
the body we now wear is to be represented by that finer and more
spiritual organism we are hereafter to be clothed in. The connection
of that future body with the physical world and its dependence on
material things we cannot understand; but in some way inconceivable
by us it is to carry on the identity of our present body, and
thereby
it reflects a sacredness and significance on this body. The body of
the full-grown man or of the white-bearded patriarch is very
different from that of the babe in its mother’s arms, but there is a
continuity that links them together and gives them identity. So the
future body may be very different from and yet the same as the
present. At the same time, the organs which merely serve for the
maintenance of our present natural body will be unnecessary and out
of place in the future body, which is spiritual in its origin and in
its maintenance. Paul therefore distinguishes between the organs of
nutrition and that body which is part of our permanent
individuality,
and which by some unimaginable process is to flower into an
everlasting body. The digestive organs of the body have their use
and
their destiny, and the body as a whole has its use and destiny.
These
two differ from one another; and if you are to argue from the one to
the other, you must keep in view this distinction. "Meats for the
belly and the belly for meats; and God shall destroy both it and
them: but the body is for the Lord, and the Lord for the body, and
God shall raise up the one as He has raised up the other." The
organs of nutrition have a present use; they are made for meats, and
have a natural correspondence with meats. Any meat which the
digestive organs approve is allowable. The conscience has to do with
meat only through these organs. It must listen to their
representations; and if they approve of certain qualities and
quantities of food, the conscience confirms this decision: approves
when the man uses the food best for these organs; disapproves when
he
uses consciously and self-indulgently what is bad for them. "Meats
for the belly and the belly for meats"—they claim each other as
their mutual, God-appointed counterparts. By eating you are not
perverting your bodily organs to a use not intended for them; you
are
putting them to the use God meant them to serve.
Besides, these organs form no part of the future spiritual body.
They
pass away with the meats for which they were made. God shall destroy
both the meats that are requisite for life in this world, and the
organs needful for deriving sustenance from them. They serve a
temporary purpose, like the houses we live in and the clothes we
wear; and as we are not morally better because we live in a stone
house, and not in a brick one, or because we wear woollens, and not
cotton—so long as we do what is best to keep us in life—so neither
is there any moral difference in meats—a remarkable conclusion for a
Jew to come to, whose religion had taught him to hold so many forms
of food in abhorrence.
But the body as a whole—for what is it made? These organs of
nutrition fulfil their function when they lead you to eat such meat
as sustains you in life; when does the body fulfil its function?
What
is its object and end? For what purpose have we a body? Paul is
never
afraid to suggest the largest questions, neither is he afraid to
give
his answer. "The body," he says, "is for the Lord, and the Lord
for the body." Here also there is a mutual correspondence and
fitness.
"The body is for the Lord." Paul was addressing Christians,
and this no Christian would be disposed to deny. Every Christian
is conscious that the body would not fulfil its end and purpose
unless it were consecrated to the Lord and informed by His
Spirit. The organism by which we come into contact with the
world outside ourselves is not the unwieldy, hindering,
irredeemable partner of the spirit, but is designed to be the
vehicle of spiritual faculties and the efficient agent of our
Lord’s purposes. It must not be looked upon with resentment,
pity, or contempt, but rather as essential to our human nature
and to the fulfilment of the Lord’s design as the Saviour of the
world and the Head of humanity. It was through the body of the
Lord that the great facts of our redemption were accomplished.
It was the instrument of the incarnation and of the
manifestation of God among men, of the death and the
resurrection by which we are saved. And as in His own body
Christ was incarnate among men, so now it is by means of the
bodily existence and energies of His people on earth that He
extends His influence.
The body then is for the Lord. He finds in it His needed instrument;
without it He cannot accomplish His will. And the Lord is for the
body. Without Him the body cannot develop into all it is intended to
be. It has a great future as well as the soul. Our adoption as God’s
children is, in Paul’s view, incomplete until the body also is
redeemed and has fought its way through sickness, base uses, death,
and dissolution into likeness to the glorified body of Christ. This
body which we now identify with ourselves, and apart from which it
is
difficult to conceive of ourselves, is not the mere temporary
lodging
of the soul, which in a few years must be abandoned; but it is
destined to preserve its identity through all coming changes, so
that
it will be recognisable still as our body. But this cannot be
believed, far less accomplished, save by faith in the fact that God
has raised up the Lord Jesus and will with Him raise us also.
Otherwise the future of the body seems brief and calamitous. Death
seems plainly to say, There is an end of all that is physical. Yes,
replies the resurrection of the Lord, in death there is an end of
this natural body; but death disengages the spiritual body from the
natural, and clothes the spirit in a more fitting garb. Understand
this we cannot, any more than we understand why a large mass draws
to
itself smaller masses: but believe it we can in presence of Christ’s
resurrection.
The Lord then is for the body, because in the Lord the body has a
future opened to it and present connections and uses which prepare
it
for that future. It is the Spirit of Christ who is, within us, the
earnest of that future, and who forms us for it, inclining us while
in the body and by means of it to sow to the Spirit and thus to reap
life everlasting. Without Christ we cannot have this Spirit, nor the
spiritual body He forms. The only future of the body we dare to look
at without a shudder is the future it has in the Lord. God has sent
Christ to secure for the body redemption from the fate which
naturally awaits it, and apart from Christ it has no outlook but the
worst. The Lord is for the body, and as well might we try to sustain
the body now without food as to have any endurable future for it
without the Lord.
But if the body is thus closely united to Christ in its present use
and in its destiny, if its proper function and fit development can
only be realised by a true fellowship with Christ. then the
inference
is self-evident that it must be carefully guarded from such uses and
impurities as involve rupture with Christ. "Know ye not that your
bodies are the members of Christ? Shall I then take the members of
Christ and make them the members of a harlot? God forbid." The
Christian is one spirit with Christ. There is a real community of
spiritual life between them. It is the spirit which possessed Christ
which now possesses the Christian. He has the same aims, the same
motives, the same view of life, the same hope, as his Lord. It is in
Christ he seeks to live, and he has no stronger desire than to be
used for His purposes. That Christ would use him as He used the
members of His own body while on earth, that there might be the same
direct influence and moving power of the Lord’s Spirit, the same
ready and instinctive response to the Lord’s will, the same
solidarity between himself and the Lord as between Christ’s body and
Christ’s Spirit—this is the Christian’s desire. To have his body a
member of Christ—this is his happiness. To be one in will with Him
who has brought by His own goodness the light of heaven into the
darkness of earth, to learn to know Him and to love Him by serving
Him and by measuring His love with all the needs of earth—this is
his life. To be so united to Christ in all that is deepest in his
nature that he knows he can never be separated from Him, but must go
forward to the happy destiny which his Lord already enjoys—this is
the Christian’s joy; and it is made possible to every man.
Possible to every man is this personal union to Christ, but to be
united thus in one Spirit to Christ and at the same time to be
united
to impurity is forever impossible. To be one with Christ in spirit
and at the same time to be one in body with what is spiritually
defiled is impossible, and the very idea is monstrous. Devotedness
to
Christ is possible, but it is incompatible with any act which means
that we become one in body with what is morally polluted. If the
Christian is as truly a member of Christ’s body as were the hands
and eyes of the body He wore on earth, then the mind shrinks, as
from
blasphemy, from following out the thought of Paul. And if any
frivolous Corinthian still objected that such acts went no deeper
than the eating of food ceremonially unclean, that they belonged to
the body that was to be destroyed, Paul says, It is not so; these
acts are full of the deepest moral significance: they were intended
by God to be the expression of inward union, and they have that
significance whether you shut your eyes to it or not.
And this is what Paul means when he goes on to say, "Every sin that
a man doeth is without the body; but he that committeth fornication
sinneth against his own body." He does not mean that this is the
only sin committed by the body, for of many other sins the body is
the agent, as in murder, lying, blasphemy, robbery, and thieving.
Neither does he mean that this is the only sin to which bodily
appetite instigates, for gluttony and drunkenness equally take their
rise in bodily appetite. But he means that this is the only sin in
which the present connection of the body with Christ and its future
destiny in Him are directly sinned against. This is the only sin, he
means, which by its very nature alienates the body from Christ, its
proper Partner. Other sins indirectly involve separation from
Christ;
this explicitly and directly transfers allegiance and sunders our
union with Him. By this sin a man detaches himself from Christ; he
professes to be united to what is incompatible with Christ.
These weighty reasonings and warm admonitions, into which Paul
throws
his whole energy, are concluded by the statement of a twofold truth
which is of much wider application than to the matter in hand: "Ye
are bought with a price to be the temple of the Holy Ghost." We are
bought with a price, and are no longer our own. The realities
underlying these words are gladly owned in every Christian
consciousness. God has caused us to recognise how truly we are His
by
showing us that He has grudged nothing which can restore us fully to
Him. He has bought us, not with any of those prices the wealthy can
pay without sacrifice and without profound interest and feeling, but
with that price which is coined and issued by love, which carries in
it the token and pledge of love, and which therefore wins us wholly.
In our relations with God we have never to do with any merely formal
transaction performed for the sake of keeping up appearances, saving
the proprieties, or satisfying the letter of law, but always with
what is necessary in the nature of things, with what is real, with
the very God of truth, the centre and source of all reality. God has
made us His own, has won our hearts and wills to Himself, by
manifesting His love in ways that touch and move us, and for
purposes
absolutely needful. God means that our attachment to Him should be
real and permanent, and He has based it on the most reasonable
grounds. He means that we should be His, not only because we are His
creatures or because He has an indefeasible right to our service as
the source of our life: but He means that our hearts should be His,
and that we should be drawn to live and labour for His ends,
convinced in our reason that this is our happiness and attracted by
His love to serve Him. He means this; and accordingly He has bought
us, has given us reason to become His, has made such advances as
ought to win us, has not grudged to show His earnest desire for our
love by Himself making sacrifices and declaring that He loves us. It
is a thought the humble heart can scarcely endure that it is loved
by
God, that it has been counted so precious in God’s sight that Divine
love and sacrifice should have been spent on its restoration. It is
a
thought that overwhelms the believing heart, but, believed in, it
wins the soul eternally to God.
We are not our own; we belong to Him who has loved us most: and His
love will be satisfied when we suffer Him to dwell in us, so that we
shall be His temples, and shall glorify Him in body and in spirit.
God claims our body as well as our spirit; He has a purpose for our
body as well as for our spirit. Our body is to glorify Him in the
future and now: in the future, by exhibiting how the Divine wisdom
has triumphed over all that threatens the body, and has used all the
present bodily experiences for preparing a permanent spiritual
embodiment of all human faculties and joys; and now, by putting
itself at the disposal of God for the accomplishment of His will. We
glorify God by allowing Him to fulfil His purpose of love in
creating
us. What that purpose is we cannot wholly know; but trusting
ourselves to His love, we can, by obeying Him, have it more and more
accomplished in us. And it is the consciousness that we are God’s
temples which constantly incites us to live worthily of Him. To say
that we are temples of God is not to use a figure of speech. It is
the temple of stone that is the figure; the true dwelling place of
God is man. In nothing can God reveal Himself as He can in man.
Through nothing else can He express so much of what is truly Divine.
It is not a building of stone which forms a fit temple for God; it
is
not even the heaven of heavens. In material nature only a small part
of God can be seen and known. It is in man, able to choose what is
morally good, able to resist temptation, to make sacrifices for
worthy ends, to determine his own character; it is in man, whose own
will is his law, and who is not the mere mechanical agent of
another’s will, that God finds a worthy temple for Himself. Through
you God can express and reveal what is best in Himself. Your love is
sustained by His, and reveals His. Your approval of what is pure and
hatred of impurity have their source in His holiness, and by
transforming you into His own image He discloses Himself as truly
dwelling and living within you. Where is God to be found and to be
known if not in men? Where can His presence and Divine goodness and
reality be more distinctly manifest than in Christ and those who are
in any degree like Him? It is in men that the unseen Divine Spirit
manifests His nature and His work. But if so, what a profanation is
it when we take this body, which is built to be His temple, and put
it to uses which it were blasphemous to associate with God! Let us
rather find our joy in realising the ideal set before us by Paul, in
keeping ourselves pure as God’s temples and in glorifying Him in our
body and in our spirit.
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