1 Corinthians
1 Corinthians
Ratings1
Average rating5
We don't have a description for this book yet. You can help out the author by adding a description.
Series
66 primary booksBible is a 66-book series with 66 released primary works first released in -800 with contributions by Anonymous, Stephen Mitchell, and Charles R. Johnson.
Series
27 primary booksThe New Testament is a 27-book series with 27 released primary works first released in 51 with contributions by Anonymous, Luke the Evangelist, and Paul the Apostle.
Series
27 released booksPauline epistles is a 27-book series with 27 released primary works first released in 51 with contributions by Anonymous and Paul the Apostle.
Series
6 released booksEpistels of Paul to the Corinthians is a 6-book series with 6 released primary works first released in 58 with contributions by Anonymous and Paul the Apostle.
Reviews with the most likes.
2022: from my notes from my seminary class:
- letter to the church founded by Paul in Corinth in the early 50s
- This letter was probably written in the mid-50s
- We know he's already written at least one letter prior to 1 Corinthians because it is referenced in 1 Cor.
- 1 Cor is a highly rhetorical letter. Paul is arguing A LOT in this letter. It is the most rhetorical of all the letters
- The book of Acts is historically unreliable when it comes to Paul so we don't want to read Paul through Acts. Acts has a different agenda. It is telling the story through a very specific theologically oriented goal.
- 1 Cor. is most famous for its disputes. It was a church in crisis, in conflict.
- Most arguments for a long time depicted the Corinthians as heathens but recent scholarship has shifted to seeing Corinthians who were Jesus followers who disagreed with Paul about how to be the church/how to live in community with each other and navigate the Empire they were living in/under.
- Much of the letter is in response to a previous letter and you can see this because Paul keeps saying “now concerning” — responding to something specific they had written in their letter
Two important questions to keep in mind:
1) When is Paul referencing the Corinthians' own words about themselves and when are his own interests, language, and agenda coming through?
2) Where do we see the Corinthians' questions and where do we see Paul emphasizing something that is his own concern?